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EXTRACLANGTOOLS(1)	       Extra Clang Tools	    EXTRACLANGTOOLS(1)

NAME
       extraclangtools - Extra Clang Tools Documentation

       Welcome	to  the	 clang-tools-extra  project which contains extra tools
       built using Clang's tooling APIs.

EXTRA CLANG TOOLS 15.0.0GIT (IN-PROGRESS) RELEASE NOTES
        Introduction

        What's	New in Extra Clang Tools 15.0.0git?

	  Major New Features

	  Improvements	to clangd

	    Inlay hints

	    Diagnostics

	    Semantic Highlighting

	    Compile flags

	    Hover

	    Code completion

	    Signature help

	    Cross-references

	    Objective-C

	    Miscellaneous

	  Improvements	to clang-doc

	  Improvements	to clang-query

	  Improvements	to clang-rename

	  Improvements	to clang-tidy

	    New checks

	    New check aliases

	    Changes in	existing checks

	    Removed checks

	  Improvements	to include-fixer

	  Improvements	to clang-include-fixer

	  Improvements	to modularize

	  Improvements	to pp-trace

	  Clang-tidy Visual Studio plugin

       Written by the LLVM Team

       WARNING:
	  These	are in-progress	notes for the upcoming Extra  Clang  Tools  15
	  release.   Release  notes  for previous releases can be found	on the
	  Download Page.

   Introduction
       This document contains the release notes	for  the  Extra	 Clang	Tools,
       part of the Clang release 15.0.0git. Here we describe the status	of the
       Extra Clang Tools in some detail, including major improvements from the
       previous	 release  and new feature work.	All LLVM releases may be down-
       loaded from the LLVM releases web site.

       For more	information about Clang	or LLVM, including  information	 about
       the latest release, please see the Clang	Web Site or the	LLVM Web Site.

       Note  that if you are reading this file from a Git checkout or the main
       Clang web page, this document applies to	the next release, not the cur-
       rent one. To see	the release notes for a	specific release,  please  see
       the releases page.

   What's New in Extra Clang Tools 15.0.0git?
       Some  of	 the  major new	features and improvements to Extra Clang Tools
       are listed here.	Generic	improvements to	Extra Clang Tools as  a	 whole
       or  to  its  underlying infrastructure are described first, followed by
       tool-specific sections.

   Major New Features
       ...

   Improvements	to clangd
   Inlay hints
   Diagnostics
        Improved Fix-its of some clang-tidy checks when applied with clangd.

   Semantic Highlighting
   Compile flags
   Hover
   Code	completion
   Signature help
   Cross-references
   Objective-C
   Miscellaneous
   Improvements	to clang-doc
       The improvements	are...

   Improvements	to clang-query
       The improvements	are...

   Improvements	to clang-rename
       The improvements	are...

   Improvements	to clang-tidy
        Added trace code to help narrow down  any  checks  and	 the  relevant
	 source	code that result in crashes.

        Clang-tidy  now  consideres newlines as separators of single elements
	 in the	Checks section in .clang-tidy configuration files. Where  pre-
	 viously  a  comma had to be used to distinguish elements in this list
	 from each other, newline characters now also work  as	separators  in
	 the  parsed  YAML. That means it is advised to	use YAML's block style
	 initiated by the pipe character | for the Checks section in order  to
	 benefit from the easier syntax	that works without commas.

        Fixed	a  regression introduced in clang-tidy 14.0.0, which prevented
	 NOLINTs from suppressing diagnostics associated with macro arguments.
	 This fixes Issue 55134.

        Added an option -verify-config	which will check the  config  file  to
	 ensure	each Checks and	CheckOptions entries are recognised.

        .clang-tidy  files can	now use	the more natural dictionary syntax for
	 specifying CheckOptions.

   New checks
        New bugprone-shared-ptr-array-mismatch	check.

	 Finds initializations of C++ shared pointers to non-array  type  that
	 are initialized with an array.

        New bugprone-unchecked-optional-access	check.

	 Warns	when  the  code	 is  unwrapping	 a std::optional<T>, absl::op-
	 tional<T>, or base::Optional<T> object	without	assuring that it  con-
	 tains a value.

        New misc-confusable-identifiers check.

	 Detects confusable Unicode identifiers.

        New bugprone-assignment-in-if-condition check.

	 Warns	when  there  is	an assignment within an	if statement condition
	 expression.

        New misc-const-correctness check.

	 Detects unmodified local variables and	suggest	adding	const  if  the
	 transformation	is possible.

        New modernize-macro-to-enum check.

	 Replaces groups of adjacent macros with an unscoped anonymous enum.

        New portability-std-allocator-const check.

	 Report	 use  of std::vector<const T> (and similar containers of const
	 elements). These are not allowed in standard  C++  due	 to  undefined
	 std::allocator<const  T>. They	do not compile with libstdc++ or MSVC.
	 Future	 libc++	 will  remove  the  extension  (D120996	  <https://re-
	 views.llvm.org/D120996>).

   New check aliases
        New  alias cppcoreguidelines-macro-to-enum to modernize-macro-to-enum
	 was added.

   Changes in existing checks
        Fixed nonsensical suggestion of  altera-struct-pack-align  check  for
	 empty structs.

        Fixed a false positive	in bugprone-branch-clone when the branches in-
	 volve unknown expressions.

        Fixed some false positives in bugprone-infinite-loop involving	depen-
	 dent expressions.

        Fixed	a crash	in bugprone-sizeof-expression when sizeof(...) is com-
	 pared against a __int128_t.

        Fixed bugs in bugprone-use-after-move:

	  Treat a move	in a lambda capture as happening in the	function  that
	   defines  the	 lambda, not within the	body of	the lambda (as we were
	   previously doing erroneously).

	  Don't emit an erroneous warning on self-moves.

        Improved cert-dcl58-cpp check.

	 The check now detects explicit	template specializations that are han-
	 dled specially.

        Made cert-oop57-cpp more sensitive by checking	for an	arbitrary  ex-
	 pression in the second	argument of memset.

        Made the fix-it of cppcoreguidelines-init-variables use false to ini-
	 tialize boolean variables.

        Improved cppcoreguidelines-prefer-member-initializer check.

	 Fixed an issue	when there was already an initializer in the construc-
	 tor  and  the	check  would try to create another initializer for the
	 same member.

        Fixed a false positive	in  cppcoreguidelines-virtual-class-destructor
	 involving  final  classes. The	check will not diagnose	classes	marked
	 final,	since those cannot be used as base classes, consequently, they
	 can not violate the rule.

        Fixed a crash in llvmlibc-callee-namespace  when  executing  for  C++
	 code that contain calls to advanced constructs, e.g. overloaded oper-
	 ators.

        Fixed false positives in misc-redundant-expression:

	  Fixed a false positive involving overloaded comparison operators.

	  Fixed  a  false  positive involving assignments in conditions. This
	   fixes Issue 35853.

        Fixed a false positive	in misc-unused-parameters where	invalid	 para-
	 meters	 were  implicitly  being  treated as being unused.  This fixes
	 Issue 56152.

        Fixed false positives in misc-unused-using-decls where	 using	state-
	 ments	bringing  operators into the scope where incorrectly marked as
	 unused.  This fixes issue 55095.

        Fixed a false positive	in modernize-deprecated-headers	involving  in-
	 cluding  C  header files from C++ files wrapped by extern "C" { ... }
	 blocks.  Such includes	will be	ignored	by now.	  By  default  now  it
	 doesn't  warn	for  including	deprecated  headers from header	files,
	 since that header file	might be used from C source files. By  passing
	 the  CheckHeaderFile=true  option if header files of the project only
	 included by C++ source	files.

        Improved performance-inefficient-vector-operation to  work  when  the
	 vector	is a member of a structure.

        Fixed	a  crash  in performance-unnecessary-value-param when the spe-
	 cialization template has an unnecessary value parameter. Removed  the
	 fix for a template.

        Fixed	a  crash  in readability-const-return-type when	a pure virtual
	 function overrided has	a const	return type. Removed  the  fix	for  a
	 virtual function.

        Skipped addition of extra parentheses around member accesses (a.b) in
	 fix-it	for readability-container-data-pointer.

        Fixed incorrect suggestions for readability-container-size-empty when
	 smart pointers	are involved.

        Fixed	a  false  positive in readability-non-const-parameter when the
	 parameter is referenced by an lvalue.

        Expanded readability-simplify-boolean-expr  to	 simplify  expressions
	 using DeMorgan's Theorem.

   Removed checks
   Improvements	to include-fixer
       The improvements	are...

   Improvements	to clang-include-fixer
       The improvements	are...

   Improvements	to modularize
       The improvements	are...

   Improvements	to pp-trace
        Added HashLoc information to InclusionDirective callback output.

   Clang-tidy Visual Studio plugin
CLANG-TIDY
   Contents
        Clang-Tidy

	  Using clang-tidy

	  Suppressing Undesired Diagnostics

       See also:

   Clang-Tidy Checks
   abseil-cleanup-ctad
       Suggests	 switching  the	 initialization	 pattern  of absl::Cleanup in-
       stances from the	factory	function to class template argument  deduction
       (CTAD), in C++17	and higher.

	  auto c1 = absl::MakeCleanup([] {});

	  const	auto c2	= absl::MakeCleanup(std::function<void()>([] {}));

       becomes

	  absl::Cleanup	c1 = []	{};

	  const	absl::Cleanup c2 = std::function<void()>([] {});

   abseil-duration-addition
       Check  for  cases  where	addition should	be performed in	the absl::Time
       domain.	When adding two	values,	and one	is known to be an  absl::Time,
       we  can infer that the other should be interpreted as an	absl::Duration
       of a similar scale, and make that inference explicit.

       Examples:

	  // Original -	Addition in the	integer	domain
	  int x;
	  absl::Time t;
	  int result = absl::ToUnixSeconds(t) +	x;

	  // Suggestion	- Addition in the absl::Time domain
	  int result = absl::ToUnixSeconds(t + absl::Seconds(x));

   abseil-duration-comparison
       Checks for comparisons which should be in the absl::Duration domain in-
       stead of	the floating point or integer domains.

       N.B.: In	cases where a Duration was being converted to an  integer  and
       then compared against a floating-point value, truncation	during the Du-
       ration  conversion  might yield a different result. In practice this is
       very rare, and still indicates a	bug which should be fixed.

       Examples:

	  // Original -	Comparison in the floating point domain
	  double x;
	  absl::Duration d;
	  if (x	< absl::ToDoubleSeconds(d)) ...

	  // Suggested - Compare in the	absl::Duration domain instead
	  if (absl::Seconds(x) < d) ...

	  // Original -	Comparison in the integer domain
	  int x;
	  absl::Duration d;
	  if (x	< absl::ToInt64Microseconds(d))	...

	  // Suggested - Compare in the	absl::Duration domain instead
	  if (absl::Microseconds(x) < d) ...

   abseil-duration-conversion-cast
       Checks for casts	of absl::Duration conversion functions,	and recommends
       the right conversion function instead.

       Examples:

	  // Original -	Cast from a double to an integer
	  absl::Duration d;
	  int i	= static_cast<int>(absl::ToDoubleSeconds(d));

	  // Suggested - Use the integer conversion function directly.
	  int i	= absl::ToInt64Seconds(d);

	  // Original -	Cast from a double to an integer
	  absl::Duration d;
	  double x = static_cast<double>(absl::ToInt64Seconds(d));

	  // Suggested - Use the integer conversion function directly.
	  double x = absl::ToDoubleSeconds(d);

       Note: In	the second example, the	suggested fix could yield a  different
       result,	as the conversion to integer could truncate. In	practice, this
       is very rare, and you should use	absl::Trunc to perform this  operation
       explicitly instead.

   abseil-duration-division
       absl::Duration  arithmetic works	like it	does with integers. That means
       that division of	two absl::Duration objects returns an int64  with  any
       fractional  component truncated toward 0. See this link for more	infor-
       mation on arithmetic with absl::Duration.

       For example:

	  absl::Duration d = absl::Seconds(3.5);
	  int64	sec1 = d / absl::Seconds(1);	 // Truncates toward 0.
	  int64	sec2 = absl::ToInt64Seconds(d);	 // Equivalent to division.
	  assert(sec1 == 3 && sec2 == 3);

	  double dsec =	d / absl::Seconds(1);  // WRONG: Still truncates toward	0.
	  assert(dsec == 3.0);

       If  you	want  floating-point  division,	 you  should  use  either  the
       absl::FDivDuration()  function, or one of the unit conversion functions
       such as absl::ToDoubleSeconds().	For example:

	  absl::Duration d = absl::Seconds(3.5);
	  double dsec1 = absl::FDivDuration(d, absl::Seconds(1));  // GOOD: No truncation.
	  double dsec2 = absl::ToDoubleSeconds(d);		   // GOOD: No truncation.
	  assert(dsec1 == 3.5 && dsec2 == 3.5);

       This check looks	for uses of absl::Duration division that is done in  a
       floating-point  context,	 and recommends	the use	of a function that re-
       turns a floating-point value.

   abseil-duration-factory-float
       Checks  for  cases  where  the  floating-point  overloads  of   various
       absl::Duration factory functions	are called when	the more-efficient in-
       teger versions could be used instead.

       This check will not suggest fixes for literals which contain fractional
       floating	 point values or non-literals. It will suggest removing	super-
       fluous casts.

       Examples:

	  // Original -	Providing a floating-point literal.
	  absl::Duration d = absl::Seconds(10.0);

	  // Suggested - Use an	integer	instead.
	  absl::Duration d = absl::Seconds(10);

	  // Original -	Explicitly casting to a	floating-point type.
	  absl::Duration d = absl::Seconds(static_cast<double>(10));

	  // Suggested - Remove	the explicit cast
	  absl::Duration d = absl::Seconds(10);

   abseil-duration-factory-scale
       Checks for cases	where arguments	to  absl::Duration  factory  functions
       are scaled internally and could be changed to a different factory func-
       tion.  This  check  also	looks for arguments with a zero	value and sug-
       gests using absl::ZeroDuration()	instead.

       Examples:

	  // Original -	Internal multiplication.
	  int x;
	  absl::Duration d = absl::Seconds(60 *	x);

	  // Suggested - Use absl::Minutes instead.
	  absl::Duration d = absl::Minutes(x);

	  // Original -	Internal division.
	  int y;
	  absl::Duration d = absl::Milliseconds(y / 1000.);

	  // Suggested - Use absl:::Seconds instead.
	  absl::Duration d = absl::Seconds(y);

	  // Original -	Zero-value argument.
	  absl::Duration d = absl::Hours(0);

	  // Suggested = Use absl::ZeroDuration	instead
	  absl::Duration d = absl::ZeroDuration();

   abseil-duration-subtraction
       Checks for cases	where subtraction should be performed in the absl::Du-
       ration domain. When subtracting two values, and the first one is	 known
       to  be  a  conversion from absl::Duration, we can infer that the	second
       should also be interpreted as an	absl::Duration,	and make  that	infer-
       ence explicit.

       Examples:

	  // Original -	Subtraction in the double domain
	  double x;
	  absl::Duration d;
	  double result	= absl::ToDoubleSeconds(d) - x;

	  // Suggestion	- Subtraction in the absl::Duration domain instead
	  double result	= absl::ToDoubleSeconds(d - absl::Seconds(x));

	  // Original -	Subtraction of two Durations in	the double domain
	  absl::Duration d1, d2;
	  double result	= absl::ToDoubleSeconds(d1) - absl::ToDoubleSeconds(d2);

	  // Suggestion	- Subtraction in the absl::Duration domain instead
	  double result	= absl::ToDoubleSeconds(d1 - d2);

       Note:  As  with	other  clang-tidy checks, it is	possible that multiple
       fixes may overlap (as in	the case of nested expressions),  so  not  all
       occurrences  can	be transformed in one run. In particular, this may oc-
       cur for nested subtraction  expressions.	 Running  clang-tidy  multiple
       times will find and fix these overlaps.

   abseil-duration-unnecessary-conversion
       Finds  and  fixes cases where absl::Duration values are being converted
       to numeric types	and back again.

       Floating-point examples:

	  // Original -	Conversion to double and back again
	  absl::Duration d1;
	  absl::Duration d2 = absl::Seconds(absl::ToDoubleSeconds(d1));

	  // Suggestion	- Remove unnecessary conversions
	  absl::Duration d2 = d1;

	  // Original -	Division to convert to double and back again
	  absl::Duration d2 = absl::Seconds(absl::FDivDuration(d1, absl::Seconds(1)));

	  // Suggestion	- Remove division and conversion
	  absl::Duration d2 = d1;

       Integer examples:

	  // Original -	Conversion to integer and back again
	  absl::Duration d1;
	  absl::Duration d2 = absl::Hours(absl::ToInt64Hours(d1));

	  // Suggestion	- Remove unnecessary conversions
	  absl::Duration d2 = d1;

	  // Original -	Integer	division followed by conversion
	  absl::Duration d2 = absl::Seconds(d1 / absl::Seconds(1));

	  // Suggestion	- Remove division and conversion
	  absl::Duration d2 = d1;

       Unwrapping scalar operations:

	  // Original -	Multiplication by a scalar
	  absl::Duration d1;
	  absl::Duration d2 = absl::Seconds(absl::ToInt64Seconds(d1) * 2);

	  // Suggestion	- Remove unnecessary conversion
	  absl::Duration d2 = d1 * 2;

       Note: Converting	to an integer and back to an absl::Duration might be a
       truncating operation if the value is not	aligned	to the scale  of  con-
       version.	  In  the rare case where this is the intended result, callers
       should use absl::Trunc to truncate explicitly.

   abseil-faster-strsplit-delimiter
       Finds instances of absl::StrSplit() or absl::MaxSplits()	where the  de-
       limiter	is a single character string literal and replaces with a char-
       acter.  The check will offer a suggestion to change the string  literal
       into  a character.  It will also	catch code using absl::ByAnyChar() for
       just a single character and will	transform that into a single character
       as well.

       These changes will give the same	result,	but  using  characters	rather
       than single character string literals is	more efficient and readable.

       Examples:

	  // Original -	the argument is	a string literal.
	  for (auto piece : absl::StrSplit(str,	"B")) {

	  // Suggested - the argument is a character, which causes the more efficient
	  // overload of absl::StrSplit() to be	used.
	  for (auto piece : absl::StrSplit(str,	'B')) {

	  // Original -	the argument is	a string literal inside	absl::ByAnyChar	call.
	  for (auto piece : absl::StrSplit(str,	absl::ByAnyChar("B"))) {

	  // Suggested - the argument is a character, which causes the more efficient
	  // overload of absl::StrSplit() to be	used and we do not need	absl::ByAnyChar
	  // anymore.
	  for (auto piece : absl::StrSplit(str,	'B')) {

	  // Original -	the argument is	a string literal inside	absl::MaxSplits	call.
	  for (auto piece : absl::StrSplit(str,	absl::MaxSplits("B", 1))) {

	  // Suggested - the argument is a character, which causes the more efficient
	  // overload of absl::StrSplit() to be	used.
	  for (auto piece : absl::StrSplit(str,	absl::MaxSplits('B', 1))) {
       subl.. title:: clang-tidy - abseil-no-internal-dependencies

   abseil-no-internal-dependencies
       Warns if	code using Abseil depends on internal details. If something is
       in  a  namespace	that includes the word "internal", code	is not allowed
       to depend upon it because it's an implementation	 detail.  They	cannot
       friend  it, include it, you mention it or refer to it in	any way. Doing
       so violates Abseil's compatibility guidelines and may result in	break-
       age. See	https://abseil.io/about/compatibility for more information.

       The following cases will	result in warnings:

	  absl::strings_internal::foo();
	  // warning triggered on this line
	  class	foo {
	    friend struct absl::container_internal::faa;
	    // warning triggered on this line
	  };
	  absl::memory_internal::MakeUniqueResult();
	  // warning triggered on this line

   abseil-no-namespace
       Ensures	code  does  not	 open namespace	absl as	that violates Abseil's
       compatibility guidelines. Code should not open namespace	absl  as  that
       conflicts  with	Abseil's  compatibility	 guidelines  and may result in
       breakage.

       Any code	that uses:

	  namespace absl {
	   ...
	  }

       will be prompted	with a warning.

       See the full Abseil compatibility guidelines for	more information.

   abseil-redundant-strcat-calls
       Suggests	removal	of unnecessary calls to	absl::StrCat when  the	result
       is being	passed to another call to absl::StrCat or absl::StrAppend.

       The  extra calls	cause unnecessary temporary strings to be constructed.
       Removing	them makes the code smaller and	faster.

       Examples:

	  std::string s	= absl::StrCat("A", absl::StrCat("B", absl::StrCat("C",	"D")));
	  //before

	  std::string s	= absl::StrCat("A", "B", "C", "D");
	  //after

	  absl::StrAppend(&s, absl::StrCat("E",	"F", "G"));
	  //before

	  absl::StrAppend(&s, "E", "F",	"G");
	  //after

   abseil-str-cat-append
       Flags uses of absl::StrCat()  to	 append	 to  a	std::string.  Suggests
       absl::StrAppend() should	be used	instead.

       The  extra calls	cause unnecessary temporary strings to be constructed.
       Removing	them makes the code smaller and	faster.

	  a = absl::StrCat(a, b); // Use absl::StrAppend(&a, b)	instead.

       Does not	diagnose cases where absl::StrCat() is used as a template  ar-
       gument for a functor.

   abseil-string-find-startswith
       Checks  whether a std::string::find() or	std::string::rfind() result is
       compared	with 0,	and suggests replacing with  absl::StartsWith().  This
       is both a readability and performance issue.

	  string s = "...";
	  if (s.find("Hello World") == 0) { /* do something */ }
	  if (s.rfind("Hello World", 0)	== 0) {	/* do something	*/ }

       becomes

	  string s = "...";
	  if (absl::StartsWith(s, "Hello World")) { /* do something */ }
	  if (absl::StartsWith(s, "Hello World")) { /* do something */ }

   Options
       StringLikeClasses
	      Semicolon-separated list of names	of string-like classes.	By de-
	      fault  only std::basic_string is considered. The list of methods
	      to considered is fixed.

       IncludeStyle
	      A	string specifying which	include-style is used, llvm or google.
	      Default is llvm.

       AbseilStringsMatchHeader
	      The  location   of   Abseil's   strings/match.h.	 Defaults   to
	      absl/strings/match.h.

   abseil-string-find-str-contains
       Finds  s.find(...) == string::npos comparisons (for various string-like
       types) and suggests replacing with absl::StrContains().

       This improves readability and reduces the  likelihood  of  accidentally
       mixing find() and npos from different string-like types.

       By   default,   "string-like   types"   includes	  ::std::basic_string,
       ::std::basic_string_view, and ::absl::string_view. See the  StringLike-
       Classes option to change	this.

	  std::string s	= "...";
	  if (s.find("Hello World") == std::string::npos) { /* do something */ }

	  absl::string_view a =	"...";
	  if (absl::string_view::npos != a.find("Hello World"))	{ /* do	something */ }

       becomes

	  std::string s	= "...";
	  if (!absl::StrContains(s, "Hello World")) { /* do something */ }

	  absl::string_view a =	"...";
	  if (absl::StrContains(a, "Hello World")) { /*	do something */	}

   Options
       StringLikeClasses
	      Semicolon-separated list of names	of string-like classes.	By de-
	      fault  includes  ::std::basic_string,  ::std::basic_string_view,
	      and ::absl::string_view.

       IncludeStyle
	      A	string specifying which	include-style is used, llvm or google.
	      Default is llvm.

       AbseilStringsMatchHeader
	      The  location   of   Abseil's   strings/match.h.	 Defaults   to
	      absl/strings/match.h.

   abseil-time-comparison
       Prefer  comparisons in the absl::Time domain instead of the integer do-
       main.

       N.B.: In	cases where an absl::Time is being converted  to  an  integer,
       alignment may occur. If the comparison depends on this alignment, doing
       the  comparison	in the absl::Time domain may yield a different result.
       In practice this	is very	rare, and still	indicates a bug	 which	should
       be fixed.

       Examples:

	  // Original -	Comparison in the integer domain
	  int x;
	  absl::Time t;
	  if (x	< absl::ToUnixSeconds(t)) ...

	  // Suggested - Compare in the	absl::Time domain instead
	  if (absl::FromUnixSeconds(x) < t) ...

   abseil-time-subtraction
       Finds and fixes absl::Time subtraction expressions to do	subtraction in
       the Time	domain instead of the numeric domain.

       There are two cases of Time subtraction in which	deduce additional type
       information:

        When  the  result  is	an absl::Duration and the first	argument is an
	 absl::Time.

        When the second argument is a absl::Time.

       In the first case, we must know the  result  of	the  operation,	 since
       without	that  the  second  operand could be either an absl::Time or an
       absl::Duration.	In the second case,  the  first	 operand  must	be  an
       absl::Time, because subtracting an absl::Time from an absl::Duration is
       not defined.

       Examples:

	  int x;
	  absl::Time t;

	  // Original -	absl::Duration result and first	operand	is an absl::Time.
	  absl::Duration d = absl::Seconds(absl::ToUnixSeconds(t) - x);

	  // Suggestion	- Perform subtraction in the Time domain instead.
	  absl::Duration d = t - absl::FromUnixSeconds(x);

	  // Original -	Second operand is an absl::Time.
	  int i	= x - absl::ToUnixSeconds(t);

	  // Suggestion	- Perform subtraction in the Time domain instead.
	  int i	= absl::ToInt64Seconds(absl::FromUnixSeconds(x)	- t);

   abseil-upgrade-duration-conversions
       Finds  calls to absl::Duration arithmetic operators and factories whose
       argument	needs an explicit cast to continue  compiling  after  upcoming
       API changes.

       The  operators  *=, /=, *, and /	for absl::Duration currently accept an
       argument	of class type that is convertible to an	arithmetic type.  Such
       a  call currently converts the value to an int64_t, even	in a case such
       as std::atomic<float> that would	result in lossy	conversion.

       Additionally,  the  absl::Duration  factory   functions	 (absl::Hours,
       absl::Minutes,  etc)  currently	accept	an int64_t or a	floating-point
       type. Similar to	the arithmetic operators, calls	with  an  argument  of
       class  type  that  is  convertible to an	arithmetic type	go through the
       int64_t path.

       These operators and factories will be changed to	only accept arithmetic
       types to	prevent	unintended behavior. After these changes are released,
       passing an argument of class type will no longer	compile, even  if  the
       type is implicitly convertible to an arithmetic type.

       Here are	example	fixes created by this check:

	  std::atomic<int> a;
	  absl::Duration d = absl::Milliseconds(a);
	  d *= a;

       becomes

	  std::atomic<int> a;
	  absl::Duration d = absl::Milliseconds(static_cast<int64_t>(a));
	  d *= static_cast<int64_t>(a);

       Note that this check always adds	a cast to int64_t in order to preserve
       the  current  behavior  of user code. It	is possible that this uncovers
       unintended behavior due to types	implicitly  convertible	 to  a	float-
       ing-point type.

   altera-id-dependent-backward-branch
       Finds  ID-dependent  variables  and  fields that	are used within	loops.
       This causes branches to occur inside the	loops, and thus	leads to  per-
       formance	degradation.

	  // The following code	will produce a warning because this ID-dependent
	  // variable is used in a loop	condition statement.
	  int ThreadID = get_local_id(0);

	  // The following loop	will produce a warning because the loop	condition
	  // statement depends on an ID-dependent variable.
	  for (int i = 0; i < ThreadID;	++i) {
	    std::cout << i << std::endl;
	  }

	  // The following loop	will not produce a warning, because the	ID-dependent
	  // variable is not used in the loop condition	statement.
	  for (int i = 0; i < 100; ++i)	{
	    std::cout << ThreadID << std::endl;
	  }

       Based on	the Altera SDK for OpenCL: Best	Practices Guide.

   altera-kernel-name-restriction
       Finds  kernel files and include directives whose	filename is kernel.cl,
       Verilog.cl, or VHDL.cl. The check is case insensitive.

       Such kernel file	names cause the	offline	compiler to generate  interme-
       diate  design files that	have the same names as certain internal	files,
       which leads to a	compilation error.

       Based on	the Guidelines for Naming the Kernel section in	the Intel FPGA
       SDK for OpenCL Pro Edition: Programming Guide.

   altera-single-work-item-barrier
       Finds OpenCL kernel functions that call a barrier function but  do  not
       call  an	 ID  function  (get_local_id,  get_local_id,  get_group_id, or
       get_local_linear_id).

       These kernels may be viable  single  work-item  kernels,	 but  will  be
       forced  to  execute  as NDRange kernels if using	a newer	version	of the
       Altera Offline Compiler (>= v17.01).

       If using	an older version of the	Altera Offline Compiler, these	kernel
       functions  will	be treated as single work-item kernels,	which could be
       inefficient or lead to errors if	NDRange	semantics were intended.

       Based on	the Altera SDK for OpenCL: Best	Practices Guide.

       Examples:

	  // error: function calls barrier but does not	call an	ID function.
	  void __kernel	barrier_no_id(__global int * foo, int size) {
	    for	(int i = 0; i <	100; i++) {
	      foo[i] +=	5;
	    }
	    barrier(CLK_GLOBAL_MEM_FENCE);
	  }

	  // ok: function calls	barrier	and an ID function.
	  void __kernel	barrier_with_id(__global int * foo, int	size) {
	    for	(int i = 0; i <	100; i++) {
	      int tid =	get_global_id(0);
	      foo[tid] += 5;
	    }
	    barrier(CLK_GLOBAL_MEM_FENCE);
	  }

	  // ok	with AOC Version 17.01:	the reqd_work_group_size turns this into
	  // an	NDRange.
	  __attribute__((reqd_work_group_size(2,2,2)))
	  void __kernel	barrier_with_id(__global int * foo, int	size) {
	    for	(int i = 0; i <	100; i++) {
	      foo[tid] += 5;
	    }
	    barrier(CLK_GLOBAL_MEM_FENCE);
	  }

   Options
       AOCVersion
	      Defines the version of the Altera	Offline	Compiler. Defaults  to
	      1600 (corresponding to version 16.00).

   altera-struct-pack-align
       Finds  structs that are inefficiently packed or aligned,	and recommends
       packing and/or aligning of said structs as needed.

       Structs that are	not packed take	up more	space than  they  should,  and
       accessing structs that are not well aligned is inefficient.

       Fix-its	are  provided  to fix both of these issues by inserting	and/or
       amending	relevant struct	attributes.

       Based on	the Altera SDK for OpenCL: Best	Practices Guide.

	  // The following struct is originally	aligned	to 4 bytes, and	thus takes up
	  // 12	bytes of memory	instead	of 10. Packing the struct will make it use
	  // only 10 bytes of memory, and aligning it to 16 bytes will make it
	  // efficient to access.
	  struct example {
	    char a;    // 1 byte
	    double b;  // 8 bytes
	    char c;    // 1 byte
	  };

	  // The following struct is arranged in such a	way that packing is not	needed.
	  // However, it is aligned to 4 bytes instead of 8, and thus needs to be
	  // explicitly	aligned.
	  struct implicitly_packed_example {
	    char a;  //	1 byte
	    char b;  //	1 byte
	    char c;  //	1 byte
	    char d;  //	1 byte
	    int	e;   //	4 bytes
	  };

	  // The following struct is explicitly	aligned	and packed.
	  struct good_example {
	    char a;    // 1 byte
	    double b;  // 8 bytes
	    char c;    // 1 byte
	  } __attribute__((packed)) __attribute__((aligned(16));

	  // Explicitly	aligning a struct to the wrong value will result in a warning.
	  // The following example should be aligned to	16 bytes, not 32.
	  struct badly_aligned_example {
	    char a;    // 1 byte
	    double b;  // 8 bytes
	    char c;    // 1 byte
	  } __attribute__((packed)) __attribute__((aligned(32)));

   altera-unroll-loops
       Finds inner loops that have not been unrolled, as  well	as  fully  un-
       rolled loops with unknown loop bounds or	a large	number of iterations.

       Unrolling  inner	loops could improve the	performance of OpenCL kernels.
       However,	if they	have unknown loop bounds or a large number  of	itera-
       tions, they cannot be fully unrolled, and should	be partially unrolled.

       Notes:

        This check is unable to determine the number of iterations in a while
	 or  do..while loop; hence if such a loop is fully unrolled, a note is
	 emitted advising the user to partially	unroll instead.

        In for	loops, our check only works with simple	arithmetic  increments
	 (  +,	-,  *,	/). For	all other increments, partial unrolling	is ad-
	 vised.

        Depending on the exit condition, the calculations for determining  if
	 the number of iterations is large may be off by 1. This should	not be
	 an issue since	the cut-off is generally arbitrary.

       Based on	the Altera SDK for OpenCL: Best	Practices Guide.

	  for (int i = 0; i < 10; i++) {  // ok: outer loops should not	be unrolled
	     int j = 0;
	     do	{  // warning: this inner do..while loop should	be unrolled
		j++;
	     } while (j	< 15);

	     int k = 0;
	     #pragma unroll
	     while (k <	20) {  // ok: this inner loop is already unrolled
		k++;
	     }
	  }

	  int A[1000];
	  #pragma unroll
	  // warning: this loop	is large and should be partially unrolled
	  for (int a : A) {
	     printf("%d", a);
	  }

	  #pragma unroll 5
	  // ok: this loop is large, but is partially unrolled
	  for (int a : A) {
	     printf("%d", a);
	  }

	  #pragma unroll
	  // warning: this loop	is large and should be partially unrolled
	  for (int i = 0; i < 1000; ++i) {
	     printf("%d", i);
	  }

	  #pragma unroll 5
	  // ok: this loop is large, but is partially unrolled
	  for (int i = 0; i < 1000; ++i) {
	     printf("%d", i);
	  }

	  #pragma unroll
	  // warning: << operator not supported, recommend partial unrolling
	  for (int i = 0; i < 1000; i<<1) {
	     printf("%d", i);
	  }

	  std::vector<int> someVector (100, 0);
	  int i	= 0;
	  #pragma unroll
	  // note: loop	may be large, recommend	partial	unrolling
	  while	(i < someVector.size())	{
	     someVector[i]++;
	  }

	  #pragma unroll
	  // note: loop	may be large, recommend	partial	unrolling
	  while	(true) {
	     printf("In	loop");
	  }

	  #pragma unroll 5
	  // ok: loop may be large, but	is partially unrolled
	  while	(i < someVector.size())	{
	     someVector[i]++;
	  }

   Options
       MaxLoopIterations
	      Defines  the  maximum number of loop iterations that a fully un-
	      rolled loop can have. By default,	it is set to 100.

	      In practice, this	refers to the integer value of the upper bound
	      within the loop statement's condition expression.

   android-cloexec-accept
       The usage of accept() is	not recommended, it's better to	use accept4().
       Without this flag, an opened sensitive  file  descriptor	 would	remain
       open across a fork+exec to a lower-privileged SELinux domain.

       Examples:

	  accept(sockfd, addr, addrlen);

	  // becomes

	  accept4(sockfd, addr,	addrlen, SOCK_CLOEXEC);

   android-cloexec-accept4
       accept4() should	include	SOCK_CLOEXEC in	its type argument to avoid the
       file  descriptor	 leakage.  Without this	flag, an opened	sensitive file
       would remain open across	a fork+exec to a lower-privileged SELinux  do-
       main.

       Examples:

	  accept4(sockfd, addr,	addrlen, SOCK_NONBLOCK);

	  // becomes

	  accept4(sockfd, addr,	addrlen, SOCK_NONBLOCK | SOCK_CLOEXEC);

   android-cloexec-creat
       The usage of creat() is not recommended,	it's better to use open().

       Examples:

	  int fd = creat(path, mode);

	  // becomes

	  int fd = open(path, O_WRONLY | O_CREAT | O_TRUNC | O_CLOEXEC,	mode);

   android-cloexec-dup
       The  usage  of  dup()  is  not recommended, it's	better to use fcntl(),
       which can set the close-on-exec flag. Otherwise,	 an  opened  sensitive
       file would remain open across a fork+exec to a lower-privileged SELinux
       domain.

       Examples:

	  int fd = dup(oldfd);

	  // becomes

	  int fd = fcntl(oldfd,	F_DUPFD_CLOEXEC);

   android-cloexec-epoll-create
       The  usage  of  epoll_create()  is  not recommended, it's better	to use
       epoll_create1(),	which allows close-on-exec.

       Examples:

	  epoll_create(size);

	  // becomes

	  epoll_create1(EPOLL_CLOEXEC);

   android-cloexec-epoll-create1
       epoll_create1() should include EPOLL_CLOEXEC in its  type  argument  to
       avoid  the file descriptor leakage. Without this	flag, an opened	sensi-
       tive file would remain open across a fork+exec  to  a  lower-privileged
       SELinux domain.

       Examples:

	  epoll_create1(0);

	  // becomes

	  epoll_create1(EPOLL_CLOEXEC);

   android-cloexec-fopen
       fopen()	should	include	 e in their mode string; so re would be	valid.
       This is equivalent to having set	FD_CLOEXEC on that descriptor.

       Examples:

	  fopen("fn", "r");

	  // becomes

	  fopen("fn", "re");

   android-cloexec-inotify-init
       The usage of inotify_init() is not recommended, it's better to use ino-
       tify_init1().

       Examples:

	  inotify_init();

	  // becomes

	  inotify_init1(IN_CLOEXEC);

   android-cloexec-inotify-init1
       inotify_init1() should include IN_CLOEXEC in its	type argument to avoid
       the file	descriptor leakage. Without this  flag,	 an  opened  sensitive
       file would remain open across a fork+exec to a lower-privileged SELinux
       domain.

       Examples:

	  inotify_init1(IN_NONBLOCK);

	  // becomes

	  inotify_init1(IN_NONBLOCK | IN_CLOEXEC);

   android-cloexec-memfd-create
       memfd_create() should include MFD_CLOEXEC in its	type argument to avoid
       the  file  descriptor  leakage.	Without	this flag, an opened sensitive
       file would remain open across a fork+exec to a lower-privileged SELinux
       domain.

       Examples:

	  memfd_create(name, MFD_ALLOW_SEALING);

	  // becomes

	  memfd_create(name, MFD_ALLOW_SEALING | MFD_CLOEXEC);

   android-cloexec-open
       A common	source of security bugs	is code	that opens a file without  us-
       ing  the	 O_CLOEXEC  flag.  Without that	flag, an opened	sensitive file
       would remain open across	a fork+exec to a lower-privileged SELinux  do-
       main,  leaking  that  sensitive	data.  Open-like  functions  including
       open(), openat(), and open64() should include O_CLOEXEC in their	 flags
       argument.

       Examples:

	  open("filename", O_RDWR);
	  open64("filename", O_RDWR);
	  openat(0, "filename",	O_RDWR);

	  // becomes

	  open("filename", O_RDWR | O_CLOEXEC);
	  open64("filename", O_RDWR | O_CLOEXEC);
	  openat(0, "filename",	O_RDWR | O_CLOEXEC);

   android-cloexec-pipe
       This  check  detects  usage of pipe(). Using pipe() is not recommended,
       pipe2() is the suggested	replacement. The check also adds the O_CLOEXEC
       flag that marks the file	descriptor to be closed	 in  child  processes.
       Without	this flag a sensitive file descriptor can be leaked to a child
       process,	potentially into a lower-privileged SELinux domain.

       Examples:

	  pipe(pipefd);

       Suggested replacement:

	  pipe2(pipefd,	O_CLOEXEC);

   android-cloexec-pipe2
       This check ensures that pipe2() is called with the O_CLOEXEC flag.  The
       check also adds the O_CLOEXEC flag that marks the file descriptor to be
       closed in child processes.  Without this	flag a sensitive file descrip-
       tor  can	 be leaked to a	child process, potentially into	a lower-privi-
       leged SELinux domain.

       Examples:

	  pipe2(pipefd,	O_NONBLOCK);

       Suggested replacement:

	  pipe2(pipefd,	O_NONBLOCK | O_CLOEXEC);

   android-cloexec-socket
       socket()	should include SOCK_CLOEXEC in its type	argument to avoid  the
       file  descriptor	 leakage.  Without this	flag, an opened	sensitive file
       would remain open across	a fork+exec to a lower-privileged SELinux  do-
       main.

       Examples:

	  socket(domain, type, SOCK_STREAM);

	  // becomes

	  socket(domain, type, SOCK_STREAM | SOCK_CLOEXEC);

   android-comparison-in-temp-failure-retry
       Diagnoses comparisons that appear to be incorrectly placed in the argu-
       ment to the TEMP_FAILURE_RETRY macro. Having such a use is incorrect in
       the  vast majority of cases, and	will often silently defeat the purpose
       of the TEMP_FAILURE_RETRY macro.

       For context, TEMP_FAILURE_RETRY is a convenience	macro provided by both
       glibc and Bionic. Its purpose is	to repeatedly run a syscall  until  it
       either succeeds,	or fails for reasons other than	being interrupted.

       Example buggy usage looks like:

	  char cs[1];
	  while	(TEMP_FAILURE_RETRY(read(STDIN_FILENO, cs, sizeof(cs)) != 0)) {
	    // Do something with cs.
	  }

       Because	TEMP_FAILURE_RETRY  will  check	 for whether the result	of the
       comparison is -1, and retry if so.

       If you encounter	this, the fix is simple: lift the  comparison  out  of
       the TEMP_FAILURE_RETRY argument,	like so:

	  char cs[1];
	  while	(TEMP_FAILURE_RETRY(read(STDIN_FILENO, cs, sizeof(cs)))	!= 0) {
	    // Do something with cs.
	  }

   Options
       RetryMacros
	      A	 comma-separated  list	of  the	 names	of  retry macros to be
	      checked.

   boost-use-to-string
       This check finds	conversion from	integer	type like int  to  std::string
       or std::wstring using boost::lexical_cast, and replace it with calls to
       std::to_string and std::to_wstring.

       It   doesn't  replace  conversion  from	floating  points  despite  the
       to_string overloads, because it would change the	behavior.

	  auto str = boost::lexical_cast<std::string>(42);
	  auto wstr = boost::lexical_cast<std::wstring>(2137LL);

	  // Will be changed to
	  auto str = std::to_string(42);
	  auto wstr = std::to_wstring(2137LL);

   bugprone-argument-comment
       Checks that argument comments match parameter names.

       The check understands argument comments in the form /*parameter_name=*/
       that are	placed right before the	argument.

	  void f(bool foo);

	  ...

	  f(/*bar=*/true);
	  // warning: argument name 'bar' in comment does not match parameter name 'foo'

       The check tries to detect typos and suggest automated fixes for them.

   Options
       StrictMode
	      When false (default value), the check will  ignore  leading  and
	      trailing	underscores and	case when comparing names -- otherwise
	      they are taken into account.

       IgnoreSingleArgument
	      When true, the check will	ignore the single argument.

       CommentBoolLiterals
	      When true, the check will	add argument comments  in  the	format
	      /*ParameterName=*/ right before the boolean literal argument.

       Before:

	  void foo(bool	TurnKey, bool PressButton);

	  foo(true, false);

       After:

	  void foo(bool	TurnKey, bool PressButton);

	  foo(/*TurnKey=*/true,	/*PressButton=*/false);

       CommentIntegerLiterals
	      When  true,  the	check will add argument	comments in the	format
	      /*ParameterName=*/ right before the integer literal argument.

       Before:

	  void foo(int MeaningOfLife);

	  foo(42);

       After:

	  void foo(int MeaningOfLife);

	  foo(/*MeaningOfLife=*/42);

       CommentFloatLiterals
	      When true, the check will	add argument comments  in  the	format
	      /*ParameterName=*/  right	 before	the float/double literal argu-
	      ment.

       Before:

	  void foo(float Pi);

	  foo(3.14159);

       After:

	  void foo(float Pi);

	  foo(/*Pi=*/3.14159);

       CommentStringLiterals
	      When true, the check will	add argument comments  in  the	format
	      /*ParameterName=*/ right before the string literal argument.

       Before:

	  void foo(const char *String);
	  void foo(const wchar_t *WideString);

	  foo("Hello World");
	  foo(L"Hello World");

       After:

	  void foo(const char *String);
	  void foo(const wchar_t *WideString);

	  foo(/*String=*/"Hello	World");
	  foo(/*WideString=*/L"Hello World");

       CommentCharacterLiterals
	      When  true,  the	check will add argument	comments in the	format
	      /*ParameterName=*/ right before the character literal argument.

       Before:

	  void foo(char	*Character);

	  foo('A');

       After:

	  void foo(char	*Character);

	  foo(/*Character=*/'A');

       CommentUserDefinedLiterals
	      When true, the check will	add argument comments  in  the	format
	      /*ParameterName=*/  right	 before	the user defined literal argu-
	      ment.

       Before:

	  void foo(double Distance);

	  double operator"" _km(long double);

	  foo(402.0_km);

       After:

	  void foo(double Distance);

	  double operator"" _km(long double);

	  foo(/*Distance=*/402.0_km);

       CommentNullPtrs
	      When true, the check will	add argument comments  in  the	format
	      /*ParameterName=*/ right before the nullptr literal argument.

       Before:

	  void foo(A* Value);

	  foo(nullptr);

       After:

	  void foo(A* Value);

	  foo(/*Value=*/nullptr);

   bugprone-assert-side-effect
       Finds assert() with side	effect.

       The condition of	assert() is evaluated only in debug builds so a	condi-
       tion  with  side	effect can cause different behavior in debug / release
       builds.

   Options
       AssertMacros
	      A	comma-separated	list of	the  names  of	assert	macros	to  be
	      checked.

       CheckFunctionCalls
	      Whether  to  treat  non-const member and non-member functions as
	      they produce side	effects. Disabled by default  because  it  can
	      increase the number of false positive warnings.

       IgnoredFunctions
	      A	 semicolon-separated list of the names of functions or methods
	      to be considered as not having side-effects. Regular expressions
	      are accepted, e.g. [Rr]ef(erence)?$ matches every	type with suf-
	      fix Ref, ref, Reference and reference. The default is empty.  If
	      a	 name  in  the	list  contains	the  sequence :: it is matched
	      against the qualified typename (i.e. namespace::Type,  otherwise
	      it is matched against only the type name (i.e. Type).

   bugprone-assignment-in-if-condition
       Finds assignments within	conditions of if statements.  Such assignments
       are bug-prone because they may have been	intended as equality tests.

       This  check  finds all assignments within if conditions,	including ones
       that are	not flagged by -Wparentheses due to an extra set of  parenthe-
       ses, and	including assignments that call	an overloaded operator=(). The
       identified assignments violate BARR group "Rule 8.2.c".

	  int f	= 3;
	  if(f = 4) { // This is identified by both `Wparentheses` and this check - should it have been: `if (f	== 4)` ?
	    f =	f + 1;
	  }

	  if((f	== 5) || (f = 6)) { // the assignment here `(f = 6)` is	identified by this check, but not by `-Wparentheses`. Should it	have been `(f == 6)` ?
	    f =	f + 2;
	  }

   bugprone-bad-signal-to-kill-thread
       Finds  pthread_kill function calls when a thread	is terminated by rais-
       ing SIGTERM signal and the signal kills the entire  process,  not  just
       the individual thread. Use any signal except SIGTERM.

       This  check  corresponds	to the CERT C Coding Standard rule POS44-C. Do
       not use signals to terminate threads.

   bugprone-bool-pointer-implicit-conversion
       Checks for conditions based on implicit conversion from a bool  pointer
       to bool.

       Example:

	  bool *p;
	  if (p) {
	    // Never used in a pointer-specific	way.
	  }

   bugprone-branch-clone
       Checks for repeated branches in if/else if/else chains, consecutive re-
       peated  branches	 in  switch  statements	 and  identical	true and false
       branches	in conditional operators.

	  if (test_value(x)) {
	    y++;
	    do_something(x, y);
	  } else {
	    y++;
	    do_something(x, y);
	  }

       In this simple example (which could arise e.g. as a  copy-paste	error)
       the then	and else branches are identical	and the	code is	equivalent the
       following shorter and cleaner code:

	  test_value(x); // can	be omitted unless it has side effects
	  y++;
	  do_something(x, y);

       If this is the intended behavior, then there is no reason to use	a con-
       ditional	 statement;  otherwise	the  issue can be solved by fixing the
       branch that is handled incorrectly.

       The check also detects repeated	branches  in  longer  if/else  if/else
       chains where it would be	even harder to notice the problem.

       In switch statements the	check only reports repeated branches when they
       are  consecutive, because it is relatively common that the case:	labels
       have some natural ordering and  rearranging  them  would	 decrease  the
       readability of the code.	For example:

	  switch (ch) {
	  case 'a':
	    return 10;
	  case 'A':
	    return 10;
	  case 'b':
	    return 11;
	  case 'B':
	    return 11;
	  default:
	    return 10;
	  }

       Here the	check reports that the 'a' and 'A' branches are	identical (and
       that  the 'b' and 'B' branches are also identical), but does not	report
       that the	default: branch	is also	identical to the first	two  branches.
       If  this	 is  indeed the	correct	behavior, then it could	be implemented
       as:

	  switch (ch) {
	  case 'a':
	  case 'A':
	    return 10;
	  case 'b':
	  case 'B':
	    return 11;
	  default:
	    return 10;
	  }

       Here the	check does not warn for	the repeated return 10;, which is good
       if we want to preserve that 'a' is before 'b' and default: is the  last
       branch.

       Finally,	the check also examines	conditional operators and reports code
       like:

	  return test_value(x) ? x : x;

       Unlike  if  statements, the check does not detect chains	of conditional
       operators.

       Note: This check	also reports situations	where branches become  identi-
       cal only	after preprocessing.

   bugprone-copy-constructor-init
       Finds  copy  constructors  where	 the constructor doesn't call the copy
       constructor of the base class.

	  class	Copyable {
	  public:
	    Copyable() = default;
	    Copyable(const Copyable &) = default;
	  };
	  class	X2 : public Copyable {
	    X2(const X2	&other)	{} // Copyable(other) is missing
	  };

       Also finds copy constructors where the constructor of  the  base	 class
       don't have parameter.

	  class	X4 : public Copyable {
	    X4(const X4	&other)	: Copyable() {}	// other is missing
	  };

       The check also suggests a fix-its in some cases.

   bugprone-dangling-handle
       Detect  dangling	 references  in	 value	handles	like std::string_view.
       These dangling references can be	a result of constructing handles  from
       temporary  values, where	the temporary is destroyed soon	after the han-
       dle is created.

       Examples:

	  string_view View = string();	// View	will dangle.
	  string A;
	  View = A + "A";  // still dangle.

	  vector<string_view> V;
	  V.push_back(string());  // V[0] is dangling.
	  V.resize(3, string());  // V[1] and V[2] will	also dangle.

	  string_view f() {
	    // All these return	values will dangle.
	    return string();
	    string S;
	    return S;
	    char Array[10]{};
	    return Array;
	  }

   Options
       HandleClasses
	      A	semicolon-separated list of class names	that should be treated
	      as handles.  By default only std::basic_string_view and std::ex-
	      perimental::basic_string_view are	considered.

   bugprone-dynamic-static-initializers
       Finds instances of static variables that	are dynamically	initialized in
       header files.

       This can	pose problems in certain multithreaded contexts. For  example,
       when disabling compiler generated synchronization instructions for sta-
       tic variables initialized at runtime (e.g. by -fno-threadsafe-statics),
       even if a particular project takes the necessary	precautions to prevent
       race  conditions	 during	initialization by providing their own synchro-
       nization, header	files included from other projects may not. Therefore,
       such a check is helpful for ensuring that disabling compiler  generated
       synchronization for static variable initialization will not cause prob-
       lems.

       Consider	the following code:

	  int foo() {
	    static int k = bar();
	    return k;
	  }

       When  synchronization  of  static  initialization  is  disabled,	if two
       threads both call foo for the first time, there is the possibility that
       k will be double	initialized, creating a	race condition.

   bugprone-easily-swappable-parameters
       Finds function definitions where	parameters of convertible types	follow
       each other directly, making call	sites prone to	calling	 the  function
       with swapped (or	badly ordered) arguments.

	  void drawPoint(int X,	int Y) { /* ...	*/ }
	  FILE *open(const char	*Dir, const char *Name,	Flags Mode) { /* ... */	}

       A  potential  call  like	 drawPoint(-2,	5) or openPath("a.txt",	"tmp",
       Read) is	perfectly legal	from the language's perspective, but might not
       be what the developer of	the function intended.

       More elaborate and type-safe constructs,	such  as  opaque  typedefs  or
       strong types should be used instead, to prevent a mistaken order	of ar-
       guments.

	  struct Coord2D { int X; int Y; };
	  void drawPoint(const Coord2D Pos) { /* ... */	}

	  FILE *open(const Path	&Dir, const Filename &Name, Flags Mode)	{ /* ... */ }

       Due  to	the potentially	elaborate refactoring and API-breaking that is
       necessary to strengthen the type	safety	of  a  project,	 no  automatic
       fix-its are offered.

   Options
   Extension/relaxation	options
       Relaxation  (or	extension) options can be used to broaden the scope of
       the analysis and	fine-tune the enabling of more	mixes  between	types.
       Some  mixes  may	 depend	 on  coding  style or preference specific to a
       project,	however, it should be noted that enabling all of these	relax-
       ations  model  the way of mixing	at call	sites the most.	 These options
       are expected to make the	check report for more  functions,  and	report
       longer mixable ranges.

       QualifiersMix
	      Whether  to  consider  parameters	 of some cvr-qualified T and a
	      differently cvr-qualified	T (i.e.	T and const  T,	 const	T  and
	      volatile	T,  etc.)  mixable between one another.	 If false, the
	      check will consider differently qualified	types unmixable.  True
	      turns the	warnings on.  Defaults to false.

	      The following example  produces  a  diagnostic  only  if	Quali-
	      fiersMix is enabled:

		 void *memcpy(const void *Destination, void *Source, std::size_t N) { /* ... */	}

       ModelImplicitConversions
	      Whether  to consider parameters of type T	and U mixable if there
	      exists an	implicit conversion from T to U	and U to T.  If	false,
	      the check	will not consider  implicitly  convertible  types  for
	      mixability.   True  turns	 warnings for implicit conversions on.
	      Defaults to true.

	      The following examples produce a diagnostic only if ModelImplic-
	      itConversions is enabled:

		 void fun(int Int, double Double) { /* ... */ }
		 void compare(const char *CharBuf, std::string String) { /* ...	*/ }

	      NOTE:
		 Changing the qualifiers of an expression's  type  (e.g.  from
		 int to	const int) is defined as an implicit conversion	in the
		 C++  Standard.	  However,  the	 check	separates  this	 deci-
		 sion-making on	the mixability of differently qualified	 types
		 based on whether QualifiersMix	was enabled.

		 For  example,	the following code snippet will	only produce a
		 diagnostic if both QualifiersMix and ModelImplicitConversions
		 are enabled:

		     void fun2(int Int,	const double Double) { /* ... */ }

   Filtering options
       Filtering options can be	used to	lessen the  size  of  the  diagnostics
       emitted by the checker, whether the aim is to ignore certain constructs
       or dampen the noisiness.

       MinimumLength
	      The  minimum length required from	an adjacent parameter sequence
	      to be diagnosed.	Defaults to 2.	Might be any positive  integer
	      greater  or equal	to 2.  If 0 or 1 is given, the default value 2
	      will be used instead.

	      For example, if 3	is specified, the examples above will  not  be
	      matched.

       IgnoredParameterNames
	      The list of parameter names that should never be considered part
	      of  a  swappable	adjacent  parameter  sequence.	The value is a
	      ;-separated list of names.  To ignore unnamed parameters,	add ""
	      to the list verbatim (not	the empty string, but the two  quotes,
	      potentially escaped!).  This option is case-sensitive!

	      By  default,  the	 following  parameter  names, and their	Upper-
	      case-initial variants are	ignored: "" (unnamed parameters),  it-
	      erator, begin, end, first, last, lhs, rhs.

       IgnoredParameterTypeSuffixes
	      The  list	 of  parameter type name suffixes that should never be
	      considered part of a swappable adjacent parameter	sequence.  Pa-
	      rameters which type, as written in the source code, end with  an
	      element  of this option will be ignored.	The value is a ;-sepa-
	      rated list of names.  This option	is case-sensitive!

	      By default, the following, and their lowercase-initial  variants
	      are  ignored:  bool,  It,	Iterator, InputIt, ForwardIt, BidirIt,
	      RandomIt,	 random_iterator,  ReverseIt,  reverse_iterator,   re-
	      verse_const_iterator,  RandomIt, random_iterator,	ReverseIt, re-
	      verse_iterator, reverse_const_iterator, Const_Iterator, ConstIt-
	      erator, const_reverse_iterator, ConstReverseIterator.  In	 addi-
	      tion, _Bool (but not _bool) is also part of the default value.

       SuppressParametersUsedTogether
	      Suppresses  diagnostics  about parameters	that are used together
	      or in a similar fashion inside the function's body.  Defaults to
	      true.  Specifying	false will turn	off the	heuristics.

	      Currently, the following heuristics are implemented  which  will
	      suppress the warning about the parameter pair involved:

	      	The  parameters	 are used in the same expression, e.g. f(a, b)
		or a < b.

	      	The parameters are further passed to the same function to  the
		same  parameter	 of that function, of the same overload.  E.g.
		f(a, 1)	and f(b, 2) to some f(T, int).

		NOTE:
		   The check does not perform path-sensitive analysis, and  as
		   such,  "same	function" in this context means	the same func-
		   tion	declaration.  If the same member function of a type on
		   two distinct	instances are called with the  parameters,  it
		   will	still be regarded as "same function".

	      	The  same member field is accessed, or member method is	called
		of the two parameters, e.g. a.foo() and	b.foo().

	      	Separate return	statements return either of the	parameters  on
		different code paths.

       NamePrefixSuffixSilenceDissimilarityTreshold
	      The  number of characters	two parameter names might be different
	      on either	the head or the	tail end with the rest of the name the
	      same so that the warning about the two parameters	are  silenced.
	      Defaults	to  1.	Might be any positive integer.	If 0, the fil-
	      tering heuristic based on	the parameters'	names is turned	off.

	      This option can be used to  silence  warnings  about  parameters
	      where  the naming	scheme indicates that the order	of those para-
	      meters do	not matter.

	      For example, the parameters LHS and RHS  are  1-dissimilar  suf-
	      fixes  of	 each other: L and R is	the different character, while
	      HS is the	common suffix.	Similarly,  parameters	text1,	text2,
	      text3  are 1-dissimilar prefixes of each other, with the numbers
	      at the end being the dissimilar part.  If	the value is at	 least
	      1, such cases will not be	reported.

   Limitations
       This check is designed to check function	signatures!

       The check does not investigate functions	that are generated by the com-
       piler  in  a  context  that is only determined from a call site.	 These
       cases include variadic functions, functions in C	code that do not  have
       an  argument  list,  and	 C++  template	instantiations.	 Most of these
       cases, which are	otherwise swappable from a caller's  standpoint,  have
       no  way of getting "fixed" at the definition point.  In the case	of C++
       templates, only primary template	definitions and	 explicit  specializa-
       tions are matched and analyzed.

       None of the following cases produce a diagnostic:

	  int printf(const char	*Format, ...) {	/* ... */ }
	  int someOldCFunction() { /* ... */ }

	  template <typename T,	typename U>
	  int add(T X, U Y) { return X + Y };

	  void theseAreNotWarnedAbout()	{
	      printf("%d %d\n",	1, 2);	 // Two	ints passed, they could	be swapped.
	      someOldCFunction(1, 2, 3); // Similarly, multiple	ints passed.

	      add(1, 2); // Instantiates 'add<int, int>', but that's not a user-defined	function.
	  }

       Due  to	the limitation above, parameters which type are	further	depen-
       dent upon template instantiations to prove that they mix	 with  another
       parameter's is not diagnosed.

	  template <typename T>
	  struct Vector	{
	    typedef T element_type;
	  };

	  // Diagnosed:	Explicit instantiation was done	by the user, we	can prove it
	  // is	the same type.
	  void instantiated(int	A, Vector<int>::element_type B)	{ /* ... */ }

	  // Diagnosed:	The two	parameter types	are exactly the	same.
	  template <typename T>
	  void exact(typename Vector<T>::element_type A,
		     typename Vector<T>::element_type B) { /* ... */ }

	  // Skipped: The two parameters are both 'T' but we cannot prove this
	  // without actually instantiating.
	  template <typename T>
	  void falseNegative(T A, typename Vector<T>::element_type B) {	/* ... */ }

       In  the	context	of implicit conversions	(when ModelImplicitConversions
       is enabled), the	modelling performed by the check warns if the  parame-
       ters  are swappable and the swapped order matches implicit conversions.
       It does not model whether there exists an  unrelated  third  type  from
       which both parameters can be given in a function	call.  This means that
       in  the following example, even while strs() clearly carries the	possi-
       bility to be called with	swapped	arguments (as long  as	the  arguments
       are string literals), will not be warned	about.

	  struct String	{
	      String(const char	*Buf);
	  };

	  struct StringView {
	      StringView(const char *Buf);
	      operator const char *() const;
	  };

	  // Skipped: Directly swapping	expressions of the two type cannot mix.
	  // (Note: StringView -> const	char * -> String would be **two**
	  // user-defined conversions, which is	disallowed by the language.)
	  void strs(String Str,	StringView SV) { /* ...	*/ }

	  // Diagnosed:	StringView implicitly converts to and from a buffer.
	  void cStr(StringView SV, const char *Buf() { /* ... */ }

   bugprone-exception-escape
       Finds  functions	 which	may throw an exception directly	or indirectly,
       but they	should not. The	functions which	should	not  throw  exceptions
       are the following:

        Destructors

        Move constructors

        Move assignment operators

        The main() functions

        swap()	functions

        Functions marked with throw() or noexcept

        Other functions given as option

       A  destructor  throwing	an exception may result	in undefined behavior,
       resource	leaks or unexpected termination	of the program.	Throwing  move
       constructor or move assignment also may result in undefined behavior or
       resource	 leak.	The swap() operations expected to be non throwing most
       of the cases and	they are always	possible to implement in a non	throw-
       ing  way.  Non  throwing	swap() operations are also used	to create move
       operations. A throwing main() function also results in unexpected  ter-
       mination.

       WARNING!	This check may be expensive on large source files.

   Options
       FunctionsThatShouldNotThrow
	      Comma  separated list containing function	names which should not
	      throw. An	example	value for this parameter can be	WinMain	 which
	      adds  function  WinMain()	 in the	Windows	API to the list	of the
	      functions	which should not throw.	 Default  value	 is  an	 empty
	      string.

       IgnoredExceptions
	      Comma separated list containing type names which are not counted
	      as  thrown  exceptions  in  the check. Default value is an empty
	      string.

   bugprone-fold-init-type
       The check flags type mismatches	in  folds  like	 std::accumulate  that
       might  result  in  loss	of  precision.	std::accumulate	folds an input
       range into an initial value using the type of the latter,  with	opera-
       tor+ by default.	This can cause loss of precision through:

        Truncation: The following code	uses a floating	point range and	an int
	 initial  value, so truncation will happen at every application	of op-
	 erator+ and the result	will be	0, which might not be  what  the  user
	 expected.

	  auto a = {0.5f, 0.5f,	0.5f, 0.5f};
	  return std::accumulate(std::begin(a),	std::end(a), 0);

        Overflow: The following code also returns 0.

	  auto a = {65536LL * 65536 * 65536};
	  return std::accumulate(std::begin(a),	std::end(a), 0);

   bugprone-forward-declaration-namespace
       Checks if an unused forward declaration is in a wrong namespace.

       The  check inspects all unused forward declarations and checks if there
       is any declaration/definition with the same name	existing, which	 could
       indicate	 that  the forward declaration is in a potentially wrong name-
       space.

	  namespace na { struct	A; }
	  namespace nb { struct	A {}; }
	  nb::A	a;
	  // warning : no definition found for 'A', but	a definition with the same name
	  // 'A' found in another namespace 'nb::'

       This check can only generate warnings, but it can't suggest  a  fix  at
       this point.

   bugprone-forwarding-reference-overload
       The  check looks	for perfect forwarding constructors that can hide copy
       or move constructors. If	a non const lvalue reference is	passed to  the
       constructor,  the forwarding reference parameter	will be	a better match
       than the	const reference	parameter of the copy constructor, so the per-
       fect forwarding constructor will	be called,  which  can	be  confusing.
       For  detailed  description  of  this issue see: Scott Meyers, Effective
       Modern C++, Item	26.

       Consider	the following example:

	  class	Person {
	  public:
	    // C1: perfect forwarding ctor
	    template<typename T>
	    explicit Person(T&&	n) {}

	    // C2: perfect forwarding ctor with	parameter default value
	    template<typename T>
	    explicit Person(T&&	n, int x = 1) {}

	    // C3: perfect forwarding ctor guarded with	enable_if
	    template<typename T, typename X = enable_if_t<is_special<T>, void>>
	    explicit Person(T&&	n) {}

	    // C4: variadic perfect forwarding ctor guarded with enable_if
	    template<typename... A,
	      enable_if_t<is_constructible_v<tuple<string, int>, A&&...>, int> = 0>
	    explicit Person(A&&... a) {}

	    // (possibly compiler generated) copy ctor
	    Person(const Person& rhs);
	  };

       The check warns for constructors	C1 and C2, because those can hide copy
       and move	constructors. We suppress warnings if the copy	and  the  move
       constructors  are  both disabled	(deleted or private), because there is
       nothing the perfect forwarding constructor could	hide in	this case.  We
       also suppress warnings for constructors like C3 and C4 that are guarded
       with  an	 enable_if,  assuming the programmer was aware of the possible
       hiding.

   Background
       For deciding whether a constructor is guarded with enable_if,  we  con-
       sider  the  types  of the constructor parameters, the default values of
       template	type parameters	and the	types of non-type template  parameters
       with  a	default	 literal value.	If any part of these types is std::en-
       able_if or std::enable_if_t, we assume the constructor is guarded.

   bugprone-implicit-widening-of-multiplication-result
       The check diagnoses instances where a result of a multiplication	is im-
       plicitly	widened, and suggests (with fix-it) to either silence the code
       by making widening explicit, or to  perform  the	 multiplication	 in  a
       wider type, to avoid the	widening afterwards.

       This  is	mainly useful when operating on	very large buffers.  For exam-
       ple, consider:

	  void zeroinit(char* base, unsigned width, unsigned height) {
	    for(unsigned row = 0; row != height; ++row)	{
	      for(unsigned col = 0; col	!= width; ++col) {
		char* ptr = base + row * width + col;
		*ptr = 0;
	      }
	    }
	  }

       This is fine in general,	but if width * height overflows,  you  end  up
       wrapping	back to	the beginning of base instead of processing the	entire
       requested buffer.

       Indeed, this only matters for pretty large buffers (4GB+), but that can
       happen  very  easily for	example	in image processing, where for that to
       happen you "only" need a	~269MPix image.

   Options
       UseCXXStaticCastsInCppSources
	      When suggesting fix-its for  C++	code,  should  C++-style  sta-
	      tic_cast<>()'s be	suggested, or C-style casts. Defaults to true.

       UseCXXHeadersInCppSources
	      When  suggesting	to include the appropriate header in C++ code,
	      should <cstddef> header be suggested, or	<stddef.h>.   Defaults
	      to true.

       Examples:

	  long mul(int a, int b) {
	    return a * b; // warning: performing an implicit widening conversion to type 'long'	of a multiplication performed in type 'int'
	  }

	  char*	ptr_add(char *base, int	a, int b) {
	    return base	+ a * b; // warning: result of multiplication in type 'int' is used as a pointer offset	after an implicit widening conversion to type 'ssize_t'
	  }

	  char ptr_subscript(char *base, int a,	int b) {
	    return base[a * b];	// warning: result of multiplication in	type 'int' is used as a	pointer	offset after an	implicit widening conversion to	type 'ssize_t'
	  }

   bugprone-inaccurate-erase
       Checks for inaccurate use of the	erase()	method.

       Algorithms  like	 remove()  do not actually remove any element from the
       container but return an iterator	to the first redundant element at  the
       end  of	the  container.	These redundant	elements must be removed using
       the erase() method. This	check warns when not all of the	elements  will
       be removed due to using an inappropriate	overload.

       For example, the	following code erases only one element:

	  std::vector<int> xs;
	  ...
	  xs.erase(std::remove(xs.begin(), xs.end(), 10));

       Call the	two-argument overload of erase() to remove the subrange:

	  std::vector<int> xs;
	  ...
	  xs.erase(std::remove(xs.begin(), xs.end(), 10), xs.end());

   bugprone-incorrect-roundings
       Checks the usage	of patterns known to produce incorrect rounding.  Pro-
       grammers	often use:

	  (int)(double_expression + 0.5)

       to round	the double expression to an integer. The problem with this:

       1. It is	unnecessarily slow.

       2. It  is  incorrect.  The  number  0.499999975 (smallest representable
	  float	number below 0.5) rounds to 1.0. Even worse behavior for nega-
	  tive numbers where both -0.5f	and -1.4f both round to	0.0.

   bugprone-infinite-loop
       Finds obvious infinite loops (loops where the condition variable	is not
       changed at all).

       Finding infinite	loops is well-known to be  impossible  (halting	 prob-
       lem).   However,	 it is possible	to detect some obvious infinite	loops,
       for example, if the loop	condition is not changed. This	check  detects
       such  loops. A loop is considered infinite if it	does not have any loop
       exit statement (break, continue,	goto, return, throw or	a  call	 to  a
       function	 called	 as  [[noreturn]]) and all of the following conditions
       hold for	every variable in the condition:

        It is a local variable.

        It has	no reference or	pointer	aliases.

        It is not a structure or class	member.

       Furthermore, the	condition must not contain a function call to consider
       the loop	infinite since functions may return different values for  dif-
       ferent calls.

       For example, the	following loop is considered infinite i	is not changed
       in the body:

	  int i	= 0, j = 0;
	  while	(i < 10) {
	    ++j;
	  }

   bugprone-integer-division
       Finds  cases  where  integer  division  in  a floating point context is
       likely to cause unintended loss of precision.

       No reports are made if divisions	are part of the	following expressions:

        operands of operators expecting integral or bool types,

        call expressions of integral or bool types, and

        explicit cast expressions to integral or bool types,

       as these	are interpreted	as signs of deliberateness from	 the  program-
       mer.

       Examples:

	  float	floatFunc(float);
	  int intFunc(int);
	  double d;
	  int i	= 42;

	  // Warn, floating-point values expected.
	  d = 32 * 8 / (2 + i);
	  d = 8	* floatFunc(1 +	7 / 2);
	  d = i	/ (1 <<	4);

	  // OK, no integer division.
	  d = 32 * 8.0 / (2 + i);
	  d = 8	* floatFunc(1 +	7.0 / 2);
	  d = (double)i	/ (1 <<	4);

	  // OK, there are signs of deliberateness.
	  d = 1	<< (i /	2);
	  d = 9	+ intFunc(6 * i	/ 32);
	  d = (int)(i /	32) - 8;

   bugprone-lambda-function-name
       Checks  for attempts to get the name of a function from within a	lambda
       expression. The name of a lambda	is always something  like  operator(),
       which is	almost never what was intended.

       Example:

	  void FancyFunction() {
	    [] { printf("Called	from %s\n", __func__); }();
	    [] { printf("Now called from %s\n",	__FUNCTION__); }();
	  }

       Output:

	  Called from operator()
	  Now called from operator()

       Likely intended output:

	  Called from FancyFunction
	  Now called from FancyFunction

   bugprone-macro-parentheses
       Finds macros that can have unexpected behavior due to missing parenthe-
       ses.

       Macros  are  expanded by	the preprocessor as-is.	As a result, there can
       be unexpected behavior; operators may be	evaluated in unexpected	 order
       and unary operators may become binary operators,	etc.

       When  the replacement list has an expression, it	is recommended to sur-
       round it	with parentheses. This ensures that the	macro result is	evalu-
       ated completely before it is used.

       It is also recommended to surround macro	arguments in  the  replacement
       list  with  parentheses.	This ensures that the argument value is	calcu-
       lated properly.

   bugprone-macro-repeated-side-effects
       Checks for repeated argument with side effects in macros.

   bugprone-misplaced-operator-in-strlen-in-alloc
       Finds cases where 1 is added to the string in the argument to strlen(),
       strnlen(), strnlen_s(), wcslen(), wcsnlen(), and	wcsnlen_s() instead of
       the result and the value	is used	as an argument to a memory  allocation
       function	 (malloc(), calloc(), realloc(), alloca()) or the new[]	opera-
       tor in C++. The check detects error cases even if one  of  these	 func-
       tions  (except  the  new[]  operator)  is called	by a constant function
       pointer.	Cases where 1 is added both to the parameter and the result of
       the strlen()-like function are ignored, as are cases  where  the	 whole
       addition	is surrounded by extra parentheses.

       C example code:

	  void bad_malloc(char *str) {
	    char *c = (char*) malloc(strlen(str	+ 1));
	  }

       The  suggested  fix is to add 1 to the return value of strlen() and not
       to its argument.	In the example above the fix would be

	  char *c = (char*) malloc(strlen(str) + 1);

       C++ example code:

	  void bad_new(char *str) {
	    char *c = new char[strlen(str + 1)];
	  }

       As in the C code	with the malloc() function, the	suggested  fix	is  to
       add  1  to the return value of strlen() and not to its argument.	In the
       example above the fix would be

	  char *c = new	char[strlen(str) + 1];

       Example for silencing the diagnostic:

	  void bad_malloc(char *str) {
	    char *c = (char*) malloc(strlen((str + 1)));
	  }

   bugprone-misplaced-pointer-arithmetic-in-alloc
       Finds cases where an integer expression is added	to or subtracted  from
       the  result  of a memory	allocation function (malloc(), calloc(), real-
       loc(), alloca())	instead	of its argument. The check detects error cases
       even if one of  these  functions	 is  called  by	 a  constant  function
       pointer.

       Example code:

	  void bad_malloc(int n) {
	    char *p = (char*) malloc(n)	+ 10;
	  }

       The  suggested  fix is to add the integer expression to the argument of
       malloc and not to its result. In	the example above the fix would	be

	  char *p = (char*) malloc(n + 10);

   bugprone-misplaced-widening-cast
       This check will warn when there is a cast of a calculation result to  a
       bigger type. If the intention of	the cast is to avoid loss of precision
       then  the cast is misplaced, and	there can be loss of precision.	Other-
       wise the	cast is	ineffective.

       Example code:

	  long f(int x)	{
	      return (long)(x *	1000);
	  }

       The result x * 1000 is first calculated using int precision. If the re-
       sult exceeds int	precision there	is loss	of precision. Then the	result
       is casted to long.

       If  there  is  no loss of precision then	the cast can be	removed	or you
       can explicitly cast to int instead.

       If you want to avoid loss of precision then put the cast	 in  a	proper
       location, for instance:

	  long f(int x)	{
	      return (long)x * 1000;
	  }

   Implicit casts
       Forgetting  to  place  the  cast	at all is at least as dangerous	and at
       least as	common as misplacing it. If CheckImplicitCasts is enabled  the
       check also detects these	cases, for instance:

	  long f(int x)	{
	      return x * 1000;
	  }

   Floating point
       Currently  warnings are only written for	integer	conversion. No warning
       is written for this code:

	  double f(float x) {
	      return (double)(x	* 10.0f);
	  }

   Options
       CheckImplicitCasts
	      If true, enables detection of implicit casts. Default is false.

   bugprone-move-forwarding-reference
       Warns if	std::move is called on a forwarding reference, for example:

	  template <typename T>
	  void foo(T&& t) {
	    bar(std::move(t));
	  }

       Forwarding references should typically be passed	 to  std::forward  in-
       stead of	std::move, and this is the fix that will be suggested.

       (A  forwarding reference	is an rvalue reference of a type that is a de-
       duced function template argument.)

       In this example,	the suggested fix would	be

	  bar(std::forward<T>(t));

   Background
       Code like the example above is sometimes	written	with  the  expectation
       that  T&&  will always end up being an rvalue reference,	no matter what
       type is deduced for T, and that it is therefore not possible to pass an
       lvalue to foo().	However, this is not true. Consider this example:

	  std::string s	= "Hello, world";
	  foo(s);

       This code compiles and, after the call to foo(),	s is left in an	 inde-
       terminate  state	because	it has been moved from.	This may be surprising
       to the caller of	foo() because  no  std::move  was  used	 when  calling
       foo().

       The  reason for this behavior lies in the special rule for template ar-
       gument deduction	on function templates like foo() -- i.e.  on  function
       templates  that	take  an rvalue	reference argument of a	type that is a
       deduced function	template argument. (See	 section  [temp.deduct.call]/3
       in the C++11 standard.)

       If  foo()  is  called on	an lvalue (as in the example above), then T is
       deduced to be an	lvalue reference. In the example, T is deduced	to  be
       std::string   &.	  The	type  of  the  argument	 t  therefore  becomes
       std::string& &&;	by the reference collapsing rules, this	 collapses  to
       std::string&.

       This  means  that  the foo(s) call passes s as an lvalue	reference, and
       foo() ends up moving s and thereby placing  it  into  an	 indeterminate
       state.

   bugprone-multiple-statement-macro
       Detect  multiple	 statement macros that are used	in unbraced condition-
       als. Only the first statement of	the macro will be  inside  the	condi-
       tional and the other ones will be executed unconditionally.

       Example:

	  #define INCREMENT_TWO(x, y) (x)++; (y)++
	  if (do_increment)
	    INCREMENT_TWO(a, b);  // (b)++ will	be executed unconditionally.

   bugprone-narrowing-conversions
       The  bugprone-narrowing-conversions  check  is  an  alias,  please  see
       cppcoreguidelines-narrowing-conversions for more	information.

   bugprone-no-escape
       Finds pointers with the noescape	attribute  that	 are  captured	by  an
       asynchronously-executed	block. The block arguments in dispatch_async()
       and dispatch_after() are	guaranteed to escape, so it is an error	 if  a
       pointer with the	noescape attribute is captured by one of these blocks.

       The  following  is  an  example	of  an invalid use of the noescape at-
       tribute.

	      void foo(__attribute__((noescape)) int *p) {
		dispatch_async(queue, ^{
		  *p = 123;
		});
	      });

   bugprone-not-null-terminated-result
       Finds function calls where it is	possible to cause  a  not  null-termi-
       nated result.  Usually the proper length	of a string is strlen(src) + 1
       or  equal  length of this expression, because the null terminator needs
       an extra	space. Without the null	terminator it can result in  undefined
       behavior	when the string	is read.

       The following and their respective wchar_t based	functions are checked:

       memcpy,	memcpy_s,  memchr,  memmove,  memmove_s,  strerror_s, strncmp,
       strxfrm

       The following is	a real-world example where the	programmer  forgot  to
       increase	the passed third argument, which is size_t length. That	is why
       the  length of the allocated memory is not enough to hold the null ter-
       minator.

	  static char *stringCpy(const std::string &str) {
	    char *result = reinterpret_cast<char *>(malloc(str.size()));
	    memcpy(result, str.data(), str.size());
	    return result;
	  }

       In addition to issuing warnings,	 fix-it	 rewrites  all	the  necessary
       code. It	also tries to adjust the capacity of the destination array:

	  static char *stringCpy(const std::string &str) {
	    char *result = reinterpret_cast<char *>(malloc(str.size() +	1));
	    strcpy(result, str.data());
	    return result;
	  }

       Note: It	cannot guarantee to rewrite every of the path-sensitive	memory
       allocations.

   Transformation rules	of 'memcpy()'
       It is possible to rewrite the memcpy() and memcpy_s() calls as the fol-
       lowing  four  functions:	 strcpy(), strncpy(), strcpy_s(), strncpy_s(),
       where the latter	two are	the safer versions  of	the  former  two.   It
       rewrites	the wchar_t based memory handler functions respectively.

   Rewrite based on the	destination array
        If copy to the	destination array cannot overflow [1] the new function
	 should	 be  the  older	copy function (ending with cpy), because it is
	 more efficient	than the safe version.

        If  copy  to	the   destination   array   can	  overflow   [1]   and
	 WantToUseSafeFunctions	 is  set  to true and it is possible to	obtain
	 the capacity of the destination array then the	new function could  be
	 the safe version (ending with cpy_s).

        If  the  new function is could	be safe	version	and C++	files are ana-
	 lyzed	and  the  destination  array  is  plain	 char/wchar_t  without
	 un/signed then	the length of the destination array can	be omitted.

        If  the new function is could be safe version and the destination ar-
	 ray is	un/signed it needs to be casted	to plain char */wchar_t	*.

       [1] It is possible to overflow:

	      	If the capacity	of the destination array is unknown.

	      	If the given length is equal to	the destination	array's	capac-
		ity.

   Rewrite based on the	length of the source string
        If the	given length is	strlen(source) or equal	length of this expres-
	 sion then the new function should be the older	copy function  (ending
	 with cpy), as it is more efficient than the safe version (ending with
	 cpy_s).

        Otherwise  we	assume	that the programmer wanted to copy 'N' charac-
	 ters, so the new function is ncpy-like	which copies 'N' characters.

   Transformations with	'strlen()' or equal length of this expression
       It transforms the wchar_t based memory and string handler functions re-
       spectively (where only strerror_s does not have wchar_t based alias).

   Memory handler functions
       memcpy Please visit the Transformation rules of 'memcpy()' section.

       memchr Usually there is a C-style cast and it is	needed to be  removed,
       because	the  new  function  strchr's return type is correct. The given
       length is going to be removed.

       memmove If safe functions are available the new function	is  memmove_s,
       which  has a new	second argument	which is the length of the destination
       array, it is adjusted, and the length of	the source  string  is	incre-
       mented by one.  If safe functions are not available the given length is
       incremented by one.

       memmove_s The given length is incremented by one.

   String handler functions
       strerror_s The given length is incremented by one.

       strncmp	If  the	 third	argument is the	first or the second argument's
       length +	1 it has to be truncated without the + 1 operation.

       strxfrm The given length	is incremented by one.

   Options
       WantToUseSafeFunctions
	      The value	true specifies that the	target environment is  consid-
	      ered  to implement '_s' suffixed memory and string handler func-
	      tions which are safer than older versions	 (e.g.	'memcpy_s()').
	      The default value	is true.

   bugprone-parent-virtual-call
       Detects	and  fixes calls to grand-...parent virtual methods instead of
       calls to	overridden parent's virtual methods.

	  struct A {
	    int	virtual	foo() {...}
	  };

	  struct B: public A {
	    int	foo() override {...}
	  };

	  struct C: public B {
	    int	foo() override { A::foo(); }
	  //			 ^^^^^^^^
	  // warning: qualified	name A::foo refers to a	member overridden in subclass; did you mean 'B'?  [bugprone-parent-virtual-call]
	  };

   bugprone-posix-return
       Checks  if  any	calls  to  pthread_*  or  posix_*  functions   (except
       posix_openpt) expect negative return values. These functions return ei-
       ther 0 on success or an errno on	failure, which is positive only.

       Example buggy usage looks like:

	  if (posix_fadvise(...) < 0) {

       This  will  never  happen as the	return value is	always non-negative. A
       simple fix could	be:

	  if (posix_fadvise(...) > 0) {

   bugprone-redundant-branch-condition
       Finds condition variables  in  nested  if  statements  that  were  also
       checked in the outer if statement and were not changed.

       Simple example:

	  bool onFire =	isBurning();
	  if (onFire) {
	    if (onFire)
	      scream();
	  }

       Here  onFire is checked both in the outer if and	the inner if statement
       without a possible change between the two checks. The check  warns  for
       this  code  and suggests	removal	of the second checking of variable on-
       Fire.

       The checker also	detects	redundant condition checks  if	the  condition
       variable	 is  an	operand	of a logical "and" (&&)	or a logical "or" (||)
       operator:

	  bool onFire =	isBurning();
	  if (onFire) {
	    if (onFire && peopleInTheBuilding >	0)
	      scream();
	  }

	  bool onFire =	isBurning();
	  if (onFire) {
	    if (onFire || isCollapsing())
	      scream();
	  }

       In the first case (logical "and") the suggested fix is  to  remove  the
       redundant  condition variable and keep the other	side of	the &&.	In the
       second case (logical "or") the whole if is  removed  similarly  to  the
       simple case on the top.

       The  condition  of  the	outer if statement may also be a logical "and"
       (&&) expression:

	  bool onFire =	isBurning();
	  if (onFire &&	fireFighters < 10) {
	    if (someOtherCondition()) {
	      if (onFire)
		scream();
	    }
	  }

       The error is also detected if both the outer  statement	is  a  logical
       "and"  (&&)  and	 the  inner  statement is a logical "and" (&&) or "or"
       (||).  The inner	if statement does not have to be a  direct  descendant
       of the outer one.

       No  error  is  detected if the condition	variable may have been changed
       between the two checks:

	  bool onFire =	isBurning();
	  if (onFire) {
	    tryToExtinguish(onFire);
	    if (onFire && peopleInTheBuilding >	0)
	      scream();
	  }

       Every possible change is	considered, thus if the	condition variable  is
       not  a  local  variable	of the function, it is a volatile or it	has an
       alias (pointer or reference) then no warning is issued.

   Known limitations
       The else	branch is not checked currently	for  negated  condition	 vari-
       able:

	  bool onFire =	isBurning();
	  if (onFire) {
	    scream();
	  } else {
	    if (!onFire) {
	      continueWork();
	    }
	  }

       The  checker currently only detects redundant checking of single	condi-
       tion variables. More complex expressions	are not	checked:

	  if (peopleInTheBuilding == 1)	{
	    if (peopleInTheBuilding == 1) {
	      doSomething();
	    }
	  }

   bugprone-reserved-identifier
       cert-dcl37-c and	cert-dcl51-cpp redirect	here  as  an  alias  for  this
       check.

       Checks  for  usages  of identifiers reserved for	use by the implementa-
       tion.

       The C and C++ standards both reserve the	following names	for such use:

        identifiers that begin	with an	underscore followed  by	 an  uppercase
	 letter;

        identifiers in	the global namespace that begin	with an	underscore.

       The  C standard additionally reserves names beginning with a double un-
       derscore, while the C++ standard	strengthens this to reserve names with
       a double	underscore occurring anywhere.

       Violating the naming rules above	results	in undefined behavior.

	  namespace NS {
	    void __f();	// name	is not allowed in user code
	    using _Int = int; // same with this
	    #define cool__macro	// also	this
	  }
	  int _g(); // disallowed in global namespace only

       The check can also be inverted, i.e. it can be configured to  flag  any
       identifier that is _not_	a reserved identifier. This mode is for	use by
       e.g.   standard	library	implementors, to ensure	they don't infringe on
       the user	namespace.

       This check does not (yet) check for other reserved  names,  e.g.	 macro
       names  identical	 to language keywords, and names specifically reserved
       by language standards, e.g. C++ 'zombie names' and C future library di-
       rections.

       This check corresponds to CERT C	Coding Standard	rule DCL37-C.  Do  not
       declare or define a reserved identifier as well as its C++ counterpart,
       DCL51-CPP. Do not declare or define a reserved identifier.

   Options
       Invert If  true,	 inverts  the check, i.e. flags	names that are not re-
	      served.  Default is false.

       AllowedIdentifiers
	      Semicolon-separated list of names	that the  check	 ignores.  De-
	      fault is an empty	list.

   bugprone-shared-ptr-array-mismatch
       Finds initializations of	C++ shared pointers to non-array type that are
       initialized with	an array.

       If  a  shared  pointer std::shared_ptr<T> is initialized	with a new-ex-
       pression	new T[]	the memory is not deallocated correctly.  The  pointer
       uses plain delete in this case to deallocate the	target memory. Instead
       a  delete[]  call  is  needed. A	std::shared_ptr<T[]> calls the correct
       delete operator.

       The check offers	replacement of shared_ptr<T> to	shared_ptr<T[]>	if  it
       is  used	 at  a single variable declaration (one	variable in one	state-
       ment).

       Example:

	  std::shared_ptr<Foo> x(new Foo[10]); // -> std::shared_ptr<Foo[]> x(new Foo[10]);
	  //			 ^ warning: shared pointer to non-array	is initialized with array [bugprone-shared-ptr-array-mismatch]
	  std::shared_ptr<Foo> x1(new Foo), x2(new Foo[10]); //	no replacement
	  //				       ^ warning: shared pointer to non-array is initialized with array	[bugprone-shared-ptr-array-mismatch]

	  std::shared_ptr<Foo> x3(new Foo[10], [](const	Foo *ptr) { delete[] ptr; }); // no warning

	  struct S {
	    std::shared_ptr<Foo> x(new Foo[10]); // no replacement in this case
	    //			   ^ warning: shared pointer to	non-array is initialized with array [bugprone-shared-ptr-array-mismatch]
	  };

       This  check  partially  covers  the  CERT  C++  Coding  Standard	  rule
       MEM51-CPP. Properly deallocate dynamically allocated resources However,
       only the	std::shared_ptr	case is	detected by this check.

   bugprone-signal-handler
       Finds  functions	 registered as signal handlers that call non asynchro-
       nous-safe functions. Any	function that cannot be	determined  to	be  an
       asynchronous-safe  function call	is assumed to be non-asynchronous-safe
       by the checker, including user functions	for which only the declaration
       is visible.  User function calls	with visible  definition  are  checked
       recursively.   The  check  handles only C code. Only the	function names
       are considered and the fact that	the function is	a system-call, but  no
       other restrictions on the arguments passed to the functions (the	signal
       call is allowed without restrictions).

       This check corresponds to the CERT C Coding Standard rule SIG30-C. Call
       only  asynchronous-safe	functions  within  signal  handlers and	has an
       alias name cert-sig30-c.

       AsyncSafeFunctionSet
	      Selects which  set  of  functions	 is  considered	 as  asynchro-
	      nous-safe	(and therefore allowed in signal handlers). Value min-
	      imal  selects  a minimal set that	is defined in the CERT SIG30-C
	      rule and includes	functions abort(), _Exit(),  quick_exit()  and
	      signal().	 Value POSIX selects a larger set of functions that is
	      listed in	POSIX.1-2017 (see this	link  for  more	 information).
	      The function quick_exit is not included in the shown list. It is
	      assumable	 that  the reason is that the list was not updated for
	      C11.  The	checker	includes quick_exit in the set of  safe	 func-
	      tions.  Functions	registered as exit handlers are	not checked.

	      Default is POSIX.

   bugprone-signed-char-misuse
       cert-str34-c  redirects	here  as an alias for this check. For the CERT
       alias,  the  DiagnoseSignedUnsignedCharComparisons  option  is  set  to
       false.

       Finds  those  signed char -> integer conversions	which might indicate a
       programming error. The basic problem with  the  signed  char,  that  it
       might  store the	non-ASCII characters as	negative values. This behavior
       can cause a misunderstanding of the written code	both when an  explicit
       and when	an implicit conversion happens.

       When  the  code contains	an explicit signed char	-> integer conversion,
       the human programmer probably expects that the converted	value  matches
       with  the  character  code (a value from	[0..255]), however, the	actual
       value is	in [-128..127] interval. To avoid this kind of	misinterpreta-
       tion,  the  desired  way	of converting from a signed char to an integer
       value is	converting to unsigned char first, which stores	all the	 char-
       acters  in the positive [0..255]	interval which matches the known char-
       acter codes.

       In case of implicit conversion, the programmer might  not  actually  be
       aware  that a conversion	happened and char value	is used	as an integer.
       There are some use cases	when this unawareness might lead  to  a	 func-
       tionally	 imperfect  code.   For	 example,  checking  the equality of a
       signed char and an unsigned char	variable is something we should	 avoid
       in C++ code. During this	comparison, the	two variables are converted to
       integers	 which	have  different	 value	ranges.	  For signed char, the
       non-ASCII characters are	stored as  a  value  in	 [-128..-1]  interval,
       while  the same characters are stored in	the [128..255] interval	for an
       unsigned	char.

       It depends on the actual	platform whether  plain	 char  is  handled  as
       signed  char  by	 default  and so it is caught by this check or not. To
       change  the  default  behavior  you   can   use	 -funsigned-char   and
       -fsigned-char compilation options.

       Currently,  this	 check	warns in the following cases: -	signed char is
       assigned	to an integer variable - signed	char  and  unsigned  char  are
       compared	 with  equality/inequality operator - signed char is converted
       to an integer in	the array subscript

       See also: STR34-C. Cast characters to unsigned char  before  converting
       to larger integer sizes

       A  good	example	from the CERT description when a char variable is used
       to read from a file that	might contain non-ASCII	characters. The	 prob-
       lem  comes up when the code uses	the -1 integer value as	EOF, while the
       255 character code is also stored as -1 in  two's  complement  form  of
       char  type.   See  a simple example of this bellow. This	code stops not
       only when it reaches the	end of the file, but also when it gets a char-
       acter with the 255 code.

	  #define EOF (-1)

	  int read(void) {
	    char CChar;
	    int	IChar =	EOF;

	    if (readChar(CChar)) {
	      IChar = CChar;
	    }
	    return IChar;
	  }

       A proper	way to fix the code above is converting	the char  variable  to
       an unsigned char	value first.

	  #define EOF (-1)

	  int read(void) {
	    char CChar;
	    int	IChar =	EOF;

	    if (readChar(CChar)) {
	      IChar = static_cast<unsigned char>(CChar);
	    }
	    return IChar;
	  }

       Another	use  case  is checking the equality of two char	variables with
       different signedness. Inside the	non-ASCII value	range this  comparison
       between a signed	char and an unsigned char always returns false.

	  bool compare(signed char SChar, unsigned char	USChar)	{
	    if (SChar == USChar)
	      return true;
	    return false;
	  }

       The  easiest  way  to fix this kind of comparison is casting one	of the
       arguments, so both arguments will have the same type.

	  bool compare(signed char SChar, unsigned char	USChar)	{
	    if (static_cast<unsigned char>(SChar) == USChar)
	      return true;
	    return false;
	  }

       CharTypdefsToIgnore
	      A	semicolon-separated list of typedef names. In  this  list,  we
	      can list typedefs	for char or signed char, which will be ignored
	      by  the check. This is useful when a typedef introduces an inte-
	      ger alias	like sal_Int8 or int8_t. In this case, human misinter-
	      pretation	is not an issue.

       DiagnoseSignedUnsignedCharComparisons
	      When true, the check will	warn on	signed char/unsigned char com-
	      parisons,	otherwise these	comparisons are	ignored.  By  default,
	      this option is set to true.

   bugprone-sizeof-container
       The check finds usages of sizeof	on expressions of STL container	types.
       Most likely the user wanted to use .size() instead.

       All  class/struct  types	 declared  in  namespace  std::	having a const
       size()  method  are  considered	containers,  with  the	exception   of
       std::bitset and std::array.

       Examples:

	  std::string s;
	  int a	= 47 + sizeof(s); // warning: sizeof() doesn't return the size of the container. Did you mean .size()?

	  int b	= sizeof(std::string); // no warning, probably intended.

	  std::string array_of_strings[10];
	  int c	= sizeof(array_of_strings) / sizeof(array_of_strings[0]); // no	warning, definitely intended.

	  std::array<int, 3> std_array;
	  int d	= sizeof(std_array); //	no warning, probably intended.

   bugprone-sizeof-expression
       The  check finds	usages of sizeof expressions which are most likely er-
       rors.

       The sizeof operator yields the size (in bytes) of  its  operand,	 which
       may  be	an  expression	or the parenthesized name of a type. Misuse of
       this operator may be leading to errors and possible  software  vulnera-
       bilities.

   Suspicious usage of 'sizeof(K)'
       A  common mistake is to query the sizeof	of an integer literal. This is
       equivalent to query the size of its type	(probably int).	The intent  of
       the programmer was probably to simply get the integer and not its size.

	  #define BUFLEN 42
	  char buf[BUFLEN];
	  memset(buf, 0, sizeof(BUFLEN));  // sizeof(42) ==> sizeof(int)

   Suspicious usage of 'sizeof(expr)'
       In cases, where there is	an enum	or integer to represent	a type,	a com-
       mon  mistake  is	to query the sizeof on the integer or enum that	repre-
       sents the type that should be used by sizeof. This results in the  size
       of the integer and not of the type the integer represents:

	  enum data_type {
	    FLOAT_TYPE,
	    DOUBLE_TYPE
	  };

	  struct data {
	    data_type type;
	    void* buffer;
	    data_type get_type() {
	      return type;
	    }
	  };

	  void f(data d, int numElements) {
	    // should be sizeof(float) or sizeof(double), depending on d.get_type()
	    int	numBytes = numElements * sizeof(d.get_type());
	    ...
	  }

   Suspicious usage of 'sizeof(this)'
       The  this  keyword  is  evaluated  to a pointer to an object of a given
       type.  The expression sizeof(this) is returning the size	of a  pointer.
       The  programmer	most  likely wanted the	size of	the object and not the
       size of the pointer.

	  class	Point {
	    [...]
	    size_t size() { return sizeof(this); }  // should probably be sizeof(*this)
	    [...]
	  };

   Suspicious usage of 'sizeof(char*)'
       There is	a subtle difference between declaring a	 string	 literal  with
       char*  A	 = "" and char A[] = "". The first case	has the	type char* in-
       stead of	the aggregate type char[]. Using sizeof	on an object  declared
       with  char* type	is returning the size of a pointer instead of the num-
       ber of characters (bytes) in the	string literal.

	  const	char* kMessage = "Hello	World!";      // const char kMessage[] = "...";
	  void getMessage(char*	buf) {
	    memcpy(buf,	kMessage, sizeof(kMessage));  // sizeof(char*)
	  }

   Suspicious usage of 'sizeof(A*)'
       A common	mistake	is to compute the size of a  pointer  instead  of  its
       pointee.	  These	 cases	may occur because of explicit cast or implicit
       conversion.

	  int A[10];
	  memset(A, 0, sizeof(A	+ 0));

	  struct Point point;
	  memset(point,	0, sizeof(&point));

   Suspicious usage of 'sizeof(...)/sizeof(...)'
       Dividing	sizeof expressions is typically	used to	retrieve the number of
       elements	of an aggregate. This check warns on  incompatible  or	suspi-
       cious cases.

       In  the	following example, the entity has 10-bytes and is incompatible
       with the	type int which has 4 bytes.

	  char buf[] = { 0, 1, 2, 3, 4,	5, 6, 7, 8, 9 };  // sizeof(buf) => 10
	  void getMessage(char*	dst) {
	    memcpy(dst,	buf, sizeof(buf) / sizeof(int));  // sizeof(int) => 4  [incompatible sizes]
	  }

       In the following	example, the expression	 sizeof(Values)	 is  returning
       the  size of char*. One can easily be fooled by its declaration,	but in
       parameter declaration the size '10' is ignored and the function is  re-
       ceiving a char*.

	  char OrderedValues[10] = { 0,	1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8,	9 };
	  return CompareArray(char Values[10]) {
	    return memcmp(OrderedValues, Values, sizeof(Values)) == 0;	// sizeof(Values) ==> sizeof(char*) [implicit cast to char*]
	  }

   Suspicious 'sizeof' by 'sizeof' expression
       Multiplying sizeof expressions typically	makes no sense and is probably
       a  logic	error. In the following	example, the programmer	used * instead
       of /.

	  const	char kMessage[]	= "Hello World!";
	  void getMessage(char*	buf) {
	    memcpy(buf,	kMessage, sizeof(kMessage) * sizeof(char));  //	 sizeof(kMessage) / sizeof(char)
	  }

       This check may trigger on code using the	arraysize macro. The following
       code is working correctly but should be simplified by  using  only  the
       sizeof operator.

	  extern Object	objects[100];
	  void InitializeObjects() {
	    memset(objects, 0, arraysize(objects) * sizeof(Object));  // sizeof(objects)
	  }

   Suspicious usage of 'sizeof(sizeof(...))'
       Getting the sizeof of a sizeof makes no sense and is typically an error
       hidden through macros.

	  #define INT_SZ sizeof(int)
	  int buf[] = {	42 };
	  void getInt(int* dst)	{
	    memcpy(dst,	buf, sizeof(INT_SZ));  // sizeof(sizeof(int)) is suspicious.
	  }

   Options
       WarnOnSizeOfConstant
	      When true, the check will	warn on	an expression like sizeof(CON-
	      STANT). Default is true.

       WarnOnSizeOfIntegerExpression
	      When   true,   the   check  will	warn  on  an  expression  like
	      sizeof(expr) where the expression	results	in an integer. Default
	      is false.

       WarnOnSizeOfThis
	      When  true,  the	check  will  warn  on	an   expression	  like
	      sizeof(this).  Default is	true.

       WarnOnSizeOfCompareToConstant
	      When   true,   the   check  will	warn  on  an  expression  like
	      sizeof(expr) <= k	for a suspicious constant k while k  is	 0  or
	      greater than 0x8000. Default is true.

   bugprone-spuriously-wake-up-functions
       Finds  cnd_wait,	 cnd_timedwait,	wait, wait_for,	or wait_until function
       calls when the function is not invoked from a loop that checks  whether
       a condition predicate holds or the function has a condition parameter.

       This  check corresponds to the CERT C++ Coding Standard rule CON54-CPP.
       Wrap functions that can spuriously wake up in a loop.  and CERT C  Cod-
       ing  Standard  rule CON36-C. Wrap functions that	can spuriously wake up
       in a loop.

   bugprone-string-constructor
       Finds string constructors that are suspicious and probably errors.

       A common	mistake	is to swap parameters to the  'fill'  string-construc-
       tor.

       Examples:

	  std::string str('x', 50); // should be str(50, 'x')

       Calling	the  string-literal  constructor with a	length bigger than the
       literal is suspicious and adds extra random characters to the string.

       Examples:

	  std::string("test", 200);   // Will include random characters	after "test".
	  std::string_view("test", 200);

       Creating	an empty string	from constructors with parameters  is  consid-
       ered  suspicious.  The  programmer should use the empty constructor in-
       stead.

       Examples:

	  std::string("test", 0);   // Creation	of an empty string.
	  std::string_view("test", 0);

   Options
       WarnOnLargeLength
	      When true, the check will	warn on	a string with a	length greater
	      than LargeLengthThreshold. Default is true.

       LargeLengthThreshold
	      An integer specifying the	large  length  threshold.  Default  is
	      0x800000.

       StringNames
	      Default is ::std::basic_string;::std::basic_string_view.

	      Semicolon-delimited  list	of class names to apply	this check to.
	      By  default  ::std::basic_string	applies	 to  std::string   and
	      std::wstring.	   Set	      to	e.g.	    ::std::ba-
	      sic_string;llvm::StringRef;QString to perform this check on cus-
	      tom classes.

   bugprone-string-integer-assignment
       The check finds assignments of an integer  to  std::basic_string<CharT>
       (std::string,  std::wstring,  etc.).  The  source of the	problem	is the
       following assignment operator of	std::basic_string<CharT>:

	  basic_string&	operator=( CharT ch );

       Numeric types can be implicitly casted to character types.

	  std::string s;
	  int x	= 5965;
	  s = 6;
	  s = x;

       Use the appropriate conversion functions	or character literals.

	  std::string s;
	  int x	= 5965;
	  s = '6';
	  s = std::to_string(x);

       In order	to suppress false positives, use an explicit cast.

	  std::string s;
	  s = static_cast<char>(6);

   bugprone-string-literal-with-embedded-nul
       Finds occurrences of string literal with	 embedded  NUL	character  and
       validates their usage.

   Invalid escaping
       Special	characters  can	 be  escaped  within a string literal by using
       their hexadecimal encoding like \x42. A common  mistake	is  to	escape
       them like this \0x42 where the \0 stands	for the	NUL character.

	  const	char* Example[]	= "Invalid character: \0x12 should be \x12";
	  const	char* Bytes[] =	"\x03\0x02\0x01\0x00\0xFF\0xFF\0xFF";

   Truncated literal
       String-like  classes  can  manipulate strings with embedded NUL as they
       are keeping track of the	bytes and the length. This is not the case for
       a char* (NUL-terminated)	string.

       A common	mistake	is to pass a string-literal with  embedded  NUL	 to  a
       string  constructor  expecting a	NUL-terminated string. The bytes after
       the first NUL character are truncated.

	  std::string str("abc\0def");	// "def" is truncated
	  str += "\0";			// This	statement is doing nothing
	  if (str == "\0abc") return;	// This	expression is always true

   bugprone-stringview-nullptr
       Checks for various ways that the	const CharT* constructor  of  std::ba-
       sic_string_view	can  be	 passed	a null argument	and replaces them with
       the default constructor in most cases. For  the	comparison  operators,
       braced  initializer list	does not compile so instead a call to .empty()
       or the empty string literal are used, where appropriate.

       This prevents code from invoking	behavior which is unconditionally  un-
       defined.	  The  single-argument const CharT* constructor	does not check
       for the null case before	 dereferencing	its  input.  The  standard  is
       slated  to  add	an  explicitly-deleted overload	to catch some of these
       cases: wg21.link/p2166

       To catch	the additional cases of	NULL (which expands to __null) and  0,
       first  run  the	modernize-use-nullptr  check to	convert	the callers to
       nullptr.

	  std::string_view sv =	nullptr;

	  sv = nullptr;

	  bool is_empty	= sv ==	nullptr;
	  bool isnt_empty = sv != nullptr;

	  accepts_sv(nullptr);

	  accepts_sv({{}});  //	A

	  accepts_sv({nullptr, 0});  //	B

       is translated into...

	  std::string_view sv =	{};

	  sv = {};

	  bool is_empty	= sv.empty();
	  bool isnt_empty = !sv.empty();

	  accepts_sv("");

	  accepts_sv("");  // A

	  accepts_sv({nullptr, 0});  //	B

       NOTE:
	  The source pattern with trailing  comment  "A"  selects  the	(const
	  CharT*) constructor overload and then	value-initializes the pointer,
	  causing  a  null  dereference. It happens to not include the nullptr
	  literal, but it is still within the scope of this ClangTidy check.

       NOTE:
	  The source pattern with trailing  comment  "B"  selects  the	(const
	  CharT*,  size_type)  constructor which is perfectly valid, since the
	  length argument is 0.	It is not changed by this ClangTidy check.

   bugprone-suspicious-enum-usage
       The checker detects various cases when an enum is probably misused  (as
       a bitmask ).

       1. When	"ADD" or "bitwise OR" is used between two enum which come from
	  different types and these types value	ranges are not disjoint.

       The following cases will	be investigated	only using StrictMode. We  re-
       gard  the  enum as a (suspicious) bitmask if the	three conditions below
       are true	at the same time:

        at most half of the elements of the enum  are	non  pow-of-2  numbers
	 (because of short enumerations)

        there	is  another  non pow-of-2 number than the enum constant	repre-
	 senting all choices (the result "bitwise OR" operation	 of  all  enum
	 elements)

        enum  type  variable/enumconstant  is	used  as an argument of	a + or
	 "bitwise OR " operator

       So whenever the non pow-of-2 element is used as a  bitmask  element  we
       diagnose	a misuse and give a warning.

       2. Investigating	the right hand side of += and |= operator.

       3. Check	 only the enum value side of a | and + operator	if one of them
	  is not enum val.

       4. Check	both side of | or + operator where the enum  values  are  from
	  the same enum	type.

       Examples:

	  enum { A, B, C };
	  enum { D, E, F = 5 };
	  enum { G = 10, H = 11, I = 12	};

	  unsigned flag;
	  flag =
	      A	|
	      H; // OK,	disjoint value intervals in the	enum types ->probably good use.
	  flag = B | F;	// Warning, have common	values so they are probably misused.

	  // Case 2:
	  enum Bitmask {
	    A =	0,
	    B =	1,
	    C =	2,
	    D =	4,
	    E =	8,
	    F =	16,
	    G =	31 // OK, real bitmask.
	  };

	  enum Almostbitmask {
	    AA = 0,
	    BB = 1,
	    CC = 2,
	    DD = 4,
	    EE = 8,
	    FF = 16,
	    GG // Problem, forgot to initialize.
	  };

	  unsigned flag	= 0;
	  flag |= E; //	OK.
	  flag |=
	      EE; // Warning at	the decl, and note that	it was used here as a bitmask.

   Options
       StrictMode
	      Default  value:  0.   When non-null the suspicious bitmask usage
	      will be investigated additionally	to the	different  enum	 usage
	      check.

   bugprone-suspicious-include
       The  check detects various cases	when an	include	refers to what appears
       to be an	implementation file, which often leads	to  hard-to-track-down
       ODR violations.

       Examples:

	  #include "Dinosaur.hpp"     // OK, .hpp files	tend not to have definitions.
	  #include "Pterodactyl.h"    // OK, .h	files tend not to have definitions.
	  #include "Velociraptor.cpp" // Warning, filename is suspicious.
	  #include_next	<stdio.c>     // Warning, filename is suspicious.

   Options
       HeaderFileExtensions
	      Default  value:  ";h;hh;hpp;hxx"	A  semicolon-separated list of
	      filename extensions of header  files  (the  filename  extensions
	      should  not  contain  a  "."  prefix). For extension-less	header
	      files, use an empty string or leave an empty string between  ";"
	      if there are other filename extensions.

       ImplementationFileExtensions
	      Default  value:  "c;cc;cpp;cxx"  Likewise, a semicolon-separated
	      list of filename extensions of implementation files.

   bugprone-suspicious-memory-comparison
       Finds potentially incorrect calls to memcmp() based  on	properties  of
       the arguments. The following cases are covered:

       Case 1: Non-standard-layout type

       Comparing the object representations of non-standard-layout objects may
       not properly compare the	value representations.

       Case 2: Types with no unique object representation

       Objects	with  the  same	value may not have the same object representa-
       tion.  This may be caused by padding or floating-point types.

       See also: EXP42-C. Do not compare padding data and FLP37-C. Do not  use
       object representations to compare floating-point	values

       This  check is also related to and partially overlaps the CERT C++ Cod-
       ing Standard rules OOP57-CPP. Prefer special member functions and over-
       loaded operators	to C Standard Library functions	and EXP62-CPP. Do  not
       access  the  bits  of an	object representation that are not part	of the
       object's	value representation

   bugprone-suspicious-memset-usage
       This check finds	memset() calls with potential mistakes in their	 argu-
       ments.  Considering the function	as void* memset(void* destination, int
       fill_value, size_t byte_count), the following cases are covered:

       Case 1: Fill value is a character ``'0'``

       Filling	up  a memory area with ASCII code 48 characters	is not custom-
       ary, possibly integer zeroes were intended instead.  The	check offers a
       replacement of '0' with 0. Memsetting character pointers	 with  '0'  is
       allowed.

       Case 2: Fill value is truncated

       Memset  converts	 fill_value  to	 unsigned  char	 before	 using	it. If
       fill_value is out of unsigned character range, it  gets	truncated  and
       memory will not contain the desired pattern.

       Case 3: Byte count is zero

       Calling memset with a literal zero in its byte_count argument is	likely
       to  be unintended and swapped with fill_value. The check	offers to swap
       these two arguments.

       Corresponding cpplint.py	check name: runtime/memset.

       Examples:

	  void foo() {
	    int	i[5] = {1, 2, 3, 4, 5};
	    int	*ip = i;
	    char c = '1';
	    char *cp = &c;
	    int	v = 0;

	    // Case 1
	    memset(ip, '0', 1);	// suspicious
	    memset(cp, '0', 1);	// OK

	    // Case 2
	    memset(ip, 0xabcd, 1); // fill value gets truncated
	    memset(ip, 0x00, 1);   // OK

	    // Case 3
	    memset(ip, sizeof(int), v);	// zero	length,	potentially swapped
	    memset(ip, 0, 1);		// OK
	  }

   bugprone-suspicious-missing-comma
       String literals placed side-by-side  are	 concatenated  at  translation
       phase  6	 (after	 the  preprocessor). This feature is used to represent
       long string literal on multiple lines.

       For instance, the following declarations	are equivalent:

	  const	char* A[] = "This is a test";
	  const	char* B[] = "This" " is	a "    "test";

       A common	mistake	done by	programmers is to forget a comma  between  two
       string literals in an array initializer list.

	  const	char* Test[] = {
	    "line 1",
	    "line 2"	 // Missing comma!
	    "line 3",
	    "line 4",
	    "line 5"
	  };

       The array contains the string "line 2line3" at offset 1 (i.e. Test[1]).
       Clang won't generate warnings at	compile	time.

       This check may warn incorrectly on cases	like:

	  const	char* SupportedFormat[]	= {
	    "Error %s",
	    "Code " PRIu64,   // May warn here.
	    "Warning %s",
	  };

   Options
       SizeThreshold
	      An unsigned integer specifying the minimum size of a string lit-
	      eral to be considered by the check. Default is 5U.

       RatioThreshold
	      A	string specifying the maximum threshold	ratio [0, 1.0] of sus-
	      picious string literals to be considered.	Default	is ".2".

       MaxConcatenatedTokens
	      An  unsigned  integer  specifying	the maximum number of concate-
	      nated tokens.  Default is	5U.

   bugprone-suspicious-semicolon
       Finds most instances of stray semicolons	that  unexpectedly  alter  the
       meaning of the code. More specifically, it looks	for if,	while, for and
       for-range  statements  whose  body is a single semicolon, and then ana-
       lyzes the context of the	code (e.g. indentation)	in an attempt  to  de-
       termine whether that is intentional.

	  if (x	< y);
	  {
	    x++;
	  }

       Here the	body of	the if statement consists of only the semicolon	at the
       end of the first	line, and x will be incremented	regardless of the con-
       dition.

	  while	((line = readLine(file)) != NULL);
	    processLine(line);

       As  a result of this code, processLine()	will only be called once, when
       the while loop with the empty body exits	with line == NULL. The	inden-
       tation of the code indicates the	intention of the programmer.

	  if (x	>= y);
	  x -= y;

       While  the  indentation	does not imply any nesting, there is simply no
       valid reason to have an if statement with an empty  body	 (but  it  can
       make  sense  for	 a  loop). So this check issues	a warning for the code
       above.

       To solve	the issue remove the stray semicolon or	in case	the empty body
       is intentional, reflect this using code indentation or  put  the	 semi-
       colon in	a new line. For	example:

	  while	(readWhitespace());
	    Token t = readNextToken();

       Here  the  second  line	is  indented in	a way that suggests that it is
       meant to	be the body of the while loop -	whose body is in  fact	empty,
       because of the semicolon	at the end of the first	line.

       Either remove the indentation from the second line:

	  while	(readWhitespace());
	  Token	t = readNextToken();

       ... or move the semicolon from the end of the first line	to a new line:

	  while	(readWhitespace())
	    ;

	    Token t = readNextToken();

       In  this	 case  the check will assume that you know what	you are	doing,
       and will	not raise a warning.

   bugprone-suspicious-string-compare
       Find suspicious usage of	runtime	 string	 comparison  functions.	  This
       check is	valid in C and C++.

       Checks  for  calls  with	implicit comparator and	proposed to explicitly
       add it.

	  if (strcmp(...))	 // Implicitly compare to zero
	  if (!strcmp(...))	 // Won't warn
	  if (strcmp(...) != 0)	 // Won't warn

       Checks that compare function results (i.e.,  strcmp)  are  compared  to
       valid constant. The resulting value is

	  <  0	  when lower than,
	  >  0	  when greater than,
	  == 0	  when equals.

       A common	mistake	is to compare the result to 1 or -1.

	  if (strcmp(...) == -1)  // Incorrect usage of	the returned value.

       Additionally,  the  check warns if the results value is implicitly cast
       to a suspicious non-integer type.  It's	happening  when	 the  returned
       value is	used in	a wrong	context.

	  if (strcmp(...) < 0.)	 // Incorrect usage of the returned value.

   Options
       WarnOnImplicitComparison
	      When  true,  the check will warn on implicit comparison. true by
	      default.

       WarnOnLogicalNotComparison
	      When true, the check will	warn on	logical	not comparison.	 false
	      by default.

       StringCompareLikeFunctions
	      A	 string	 specifying  the  comma-separated  names  of the extra
	      string comparison	functions. Default is an  empty	 string.   The
	      check  will  detect  the	following string comparison functions:
	      __builtin_memcmp,	   __builtin_strcasecmp,     __builtin_strcmp,
	      __builtin_strncasecmp,  __builtin_strncmp,  _mbscmp,  _mbscmp_l,
	      _mbsicmp,	_mbsicmp_l, _mbsnbcmp, _mbsnbcmp_l,  _mbsnbicmp,  _mb-
	      snbicmp_l,   _mbsncmp,   _mbsncmp_l,   _mbsnicmp,	  _mbsnicmp_l,
	      _memicmp,	_memicmp_l,  _stricmp,	_stricmp_l,  _strnicmp,	 _str-
	      nicmp_l,	_wcsicmp, _wcsicmp_l, _wcsnicmp, _wcsnicmp_l, lstrcmp,
	      lstrcmpi,	memcmp,	memicmp, strcasecmp, strcmp, strcmpi, stricmp,
	      strncasecmp, strncmp, strnicmp, wcscasecmp, wcscmp, wcsicmp, wc-
	      sncmp, wcsnicmp, wmemcmp.

   bugprone-swapped-arguments
       Finds potentially swapped arguments by looking at implicit conversions.

   bugprone-terminating-continue
       Detects do while	loops with a condition always evaluating to false that
       have a continue statement, as this continue terminates the loop	effec-
       tively.

	  void f() {
	  do {
	    // some code
	    continue; // terminating continue
	    // some other code
	  } while(false);

   bugprone-throw-keyword-missing
       Warns  about a potentially missing throw	keyword. If a temporary	object
       is created, but the object's type derives from (or is the  same	as)  a
       class  that has 'EXCEPTION', 'Exception'	or 'exception' in its name, we
       can assume that the programmer's	intention was to throw that object.

       Example:

	  void f(int i)	{
	    if (i < 0) {
	      // Exception is created but is not thrown.
	      std::runtime_error("Unexpected argument");
	    }
	  }

   bugprone-too-small-loop-variable
       Detects those for loops that have a loop	variable with  a  "too	small"
       type which means	this type can't	represent all values which are part of
       the iteration range.

	  int main() {
	    long size =	294967296l;
	    for	(short i = 0; i	< size;	++i) {}
	  }

       This  for  loop is an infinite loop because the short type can't	repre-
       sent all	values in the [0..size]	interval.

       In a real use case size means a container's size	which depends  on  the
       user input.

	  int doSomething(const	std::vector& items) {
	    for	(short i = 0; i	< items.size();	++i) {}
	  }

       This  algorithm	works  for a small amount of objects, but will lead to
       freeze for a larger user	input.

       MagnitudeBitsUpperLimit
	      Upper limit for the magnitude bits of the	loop variable. If it's
	      set the check filters out	those catches in which the loop	 vari-
	      able's  type  has	 more  magnitude  bits	as the specified upper
	      limit. The default value is 16.  For example, if the  user  sets
	      this  option to 31 (bits), then a	32-bit unsigned	int is ignored
	      by the check, however a 32-bit int is not	(A 32-bit  signed  int
	      has 31 magnitude bits).

	  int main() {
	    long size =	294967296l;
	    for	(unsigned i = 0; i < size; ++i)	{} // no warning with MagnitudeBitsUpperLimit =	31 on a	system where unsigned is 32-bit
	    for	(int i = 0; i <	size; ++i) {} // warning with MagnitudeBitsUpperLimit =	31 on a	system where int is 32-bit
	  }

   bugprone-unchecked-optional-access
       Note:  This  check uses a flow-sensitive	static analysis	to produce its
       results.	Therefore, it may be more resource intensive (RAM,  CPU)  than
       the average clang-tidy check.

       This  check  identifies unsafe accesses to values contained in std::op-
       tional<T>, absl::optional<T>, or	base::Optional<T>  objects.  Below  we
       will refer to all these types collectively as optional<T>.

       An  access to the value of an optional<T> occurs	when one of its	value,
       operator*, or operator->	member functions is invoked.   To  align  with
       common  misconceptions,	the  check considers these member functions as
       equivalent, even	though there are subtle	differences related to	excep-
       tions  versus undefined behavior. See go/optional-style-recommendations
       for more	information on that topic.

       An access to the	value of an optional<T>	is considered safe if and only
       if code in the local scope (for example,	a function body) ensures  that
       the  optional<T>	 has  a	value in all possible execution	paths that can
       reach the access. That should happen either through an explicit	check,
       using  the  optional<T>::has_value  member function, or by constructing
       the optional<T> in a way	that shows that	it unambiguously holds a value
       (e.g using std::make_optional which always returns a populated std::op-
       tional<T>).

       Below we	list some examples, starting with unsafe optional access  pat-
       terns, followed by safe access patterns.

   Unsafe access patterns
   Access the value without checking if	it exists
       The  check  flags accesses to the value that are	not locally guarded by
       existence check:

	  void f(std::optional<int> opt) {
	    use(*opt); // unsafe: it is	unclear	whether	`opt` has a value.
	  }

   Access the value in the wrong branch
       The check is aware of the state of  an  optional	 object	 in  different
       branches	of the code. For example:

	  void f(std::optional<int> opt) {
	    if (opt.has_value()) {
	    } else {
	      use(opt.value());	// unsafe: it is clear that `opt` does *not* have a value.
	    }
	  }

   Assume a function result to be stable
       The  check is aware that	function results might not be stable. That is,
       consecutive calls to the	same function might return  different  values.
       For example:

	  void f(Foo foo) {
	    if (foo.opt().has_value()) {
	      use(*foo.opt()); // unsafe: it is	unclear	whether	`foo.opt()` has	a value.
	    }
	  }

   Rely	on invariants of uncommon APIs
       The check is unaware of invariants of uncommon APIs. For	example:

	  void f(Foo foo) {
	    if (foo.HasProperty("bar"))	{
	      use(*foo.GetProperty("bar")); // unsafe: it is unclear whether `foo.GetProperty("bar")` has a value.
	    }
	  }

   Check if a value exists, then pass the optional to another function
       The  check  relies  on local reasoning. The check and value access must
       both happen in the same function. An access is considered  unsafe  even
       if  the	caller	of the function	performing the access ensures that the
       optional	has a value. For example:

	  void g(std::optional<int> opt) {
	    use(*opt); // unsafe: it is	unclear	whether	`opt` has a value.
	  }

	  void f(std::optional<int> opt) {
	    if (opt.has_value()) {
	      g(opt);
	    }
	  }

   Safe	access patterns
   Check if a value exists, then access	the value
       The check recognizes all	straightforward	ways for checking if  a	 value
       exists and accessing the	value contained	in an optional object. For ex-
       ample:

	  void f(std::optional<int> opt) {
	    if (opt.has_value()) {
	      use(*opt);
	    }
	  }

   Check if a value exists, then access	the value from a copy
       The  criteria that the check uses is semantic, not syntactic. It	recog-
       nizes when a copy of the	optional object	being  accessed	 is  known  to
       have a value. For example:

	  void f(std::optional<int> opt1) {
	    if (opt1.has_value()) {
	      std::optional<int> opt2 =	opt1;
	      use(*opt2);
	    }
	  }

   Ensure that a value exists using common macros
       The  check  is  aware  of  common  macros  like	CHECK, DCHECK, and AS-
       SERT_THAT. Those	can be used to ensure that an optional	object	has  a
       value. For example:

	  void f(std::optional<int> opt) {
	    DCHECK(opt.has_value());
	    use(*opt);
	  }

   Ensure that a value exists, then access the value in	a correlated branch
       The  check  is  aware of	correlated branches in the code	and can	figure
       out when	an optional object is ensured to have a	value on all execution
       paths that lead to an access. For example:

	  void f(std::optional<int> opt) {
	    bool safe =	false;
	    if (opt.has_value()	&& SomeOtherCondition()) {
	      safe = true;
	    }
	    // ... more	code...
	    if (safe) {
	      use(*opt);
	    }
	  }

   Stabilize function results
       Since function results are not assumed to be stable across calls, it is
       best to store the result	of the function	call in	a local	 variable  and
       use that	variable to access the value. For example:

	  void f(Foo foo) {
	    if (const auto& foo_opt = foo.opt(); foo_opt.has_value()) {
	      use(*foo_opt);
	    }
	  }

   Do not rely on uncommon-API invariants
       When uncommon APIs guarantee that an optional has contents, do not rely
       on  it  --  instead,  check  explicitly	that the optional object has a
       value. For example:

	  void f(Foo foo) {
	    if (const auto& property = foo.GetProperty("bar")) {
	      use(*property);
	    }
	  }

       instead of the HasProperty, GetProperty pairing we saw above.

   Do not rely on caller-performed checks
       If you know that	all of a function's callers have checked that  an  op-
       tional  argument	 has  a	 value,	either change the function to take the
       value directly or check the optional again in the local	scope  of  the
       callee. For example:

	  void g(int val) {
	    use(val);
	  }

	  void f(std::optional<int> opt) {
	    if (opt.has_value()) {
	      g(*opt);
	    }
	  }

       and

	  struct S {
	    std::optional<int> opt;
	    int	x;
	  };

	  void g(const S &s) {
	    if (s.opt.has_value() && s.x > 10) {
	      use(*s.opt);
	  }

	  void f(S s) {
	    if (s.opt.has_value()) {
	      g(s);
	    }
	  }

   Additional notes
   Aliases created via using declarations
       The  check  is  aware of	aliases	of optional types that are created via
       using declarations. For example:

	  using	OptionalInt = std::optional<int>;

	  void f(OptionalInt opt) {
	    use(opt.value()); // unsafe: it is unclear whether `opt` has a value.
	  }

   Lambdas
       The check does not currently report unsafe optional acceses in lambdas.
       A future	version	will expand the	scope to lambdas, following the	 rules
       outlined	above. It is best to follow the	same principles	when using op-
       tionals in lambdas.

   bugprone-undefined-memory-manipulation
       Finds  calls  of	 memory	 manipulation functions	memset(), memcpy() and
       memmove() on not	TriviallyCopyable objects resulting in	undefined  be-
       havior.

   bugprone-undelegated-constructor
       Finds  creation	of  temporary objects in constructors that look	like a
       function	call to	another	constructor of the same	class.

       The user	most likely meant to use  a  delegating	 constructor  or  base
       class initializer.

   bugprone-unhandled-exception-at-new
       Finds calls to new with missing exception handler for std::bad_alloc.

       Calls to	new may	throw exceptions of type std::bad_alloc	that should be
       handled.	 Alternatively,	 the  nonthrowing form of new can be used. The
       check verifies that the exception is handled in the function that calls
       new.

       If a nonthrowing	version	is used	or the exception is allowed to	propa-
       gate out	of the function	no warning is generated.

       The  exception  handler	is  checked  if	it catches a std::bad_alloc or
       std::exception exception	type,  or  all	exceptions  (catch-all).   The
       check  assumes that any user-defined operator new is either noexcept or
       may throw an exception of type std::bad_alloc (or one derived from it).
       Other exception class types are not taken into account.

	  int *f() noexcept {
	    int	*p = new int[1000]; // warning:	missing	exception handler for allocation failure at 'new'
	    // ...
	    return p;
	  }

	  int *f1() { // not 'noexcept'
	    int	*p = new int[1000]; // no warning: exception can be handled outside
				    // of this function
	    // ...
	    return p;
	  }

	  int *f2() noexcept {
	    try	{
	      int *p = new int[1000]; // no warning: exception is handled
	      // ...
	      return p;
	    } catch (std::bad_alloc &) {
	      // ...
	    }
	    // ...
	  }

	  int *f3() noexcept {
	    int	*p = new (std::nothrow)	int[1000]; // no warning: "nothrow" is used
	    // ...
	    return p;
	  }

   bugprone-unhandled-self-assignment
       cert-oop54-cpp redirects	here as	an alias for this check. For the  CERT
       alias, the WarnOnlyIfThisHasSuspiciousField option is set to false.

       Finds  user-defined  copy assignment operators which do not protect the
       code against self-assignment either by checking self-assignment explic-
       itly or using the copy-and-swap or the copy-and-move method.

       By default, this	check searches	only  those  classes  which  have  any
       pointer or C array field	to avoid false positives. In case of a pointer
       or  a  C	array, it's likely that	self-copy assignment breaks the	object
       if the copy assignment operator was not written with care.

       See also: OOP54-CPP. Gracefully handle self-copy	assignment

       A copy assignment operator must prevent that self-copy assignment ruins
       the object state. A typical use case is when the	class  has  a  pointer
       field  and  the copy assignment operator	first releases the pointed ob-
       ject and	then tries to assign it:

	  class	T {
	  int* p;

	  public:
	    T(const T &rhs) : p(rhs.p ?	new int(*rhs.p)	: nullptr) {}
	    ~T() { delete p; }

	    // ...

	    T& operator=(const T &rhs) {
	      delete p;
	      p	= new int(*rhs.p);
	      return *this;
	    }
	  };

       There are two common C++	patterns to avoid this problem.	The  first  is
       the self-assignment check:

	  class	T {
	  int* p;

	  public:
	    T(const T &rhs) : p(rhs.p ?	new int(*rhs.p)	: nullptr) {}
	    ~T() { delete p; }

	    // ...

	    T& operator=(const T &rhs) {
	      if(this == &rhs)
		return *this;

	      delete p;
	      p	= new int(*rhs.p);
	      return *this;
	    }
	  };

       The  second  one	is the copy-and-swap method when we create a temporary
       copy (using the copy constructor) and then swap this  temporary	object
       with this:

	  class	T {
	  int* p;

	  public:
	    T(const T &rhs) : p(rhs.p ?	new int(*rhs.p)	: nullptr) {}
	    ~T() { delete p; }

	    // ...

	    void swap(T	&rhs) {
	      using std::swap;
	      swap(p, rhs.p);
	    }

	    T& operator=(const T &rhs) {
	      T(rhs).swap(*this);
	      return *this;
	    }
	  };

       There  is  a  third  pattern  which  is	less common. Let's call	it the
       copy-and-move method when we create a temporary copy  (using  the  copy
       constructor)  and  then	move  this temporary object into this (needs a
       move assignment operator):

	  class	T {
	  int* p;

	  public:
	    T(const T &rhs) : p(rhs.p ?	new int(*rhs.p)	: nullptr) {}
	    ~T() { delete p; }

	    // ...

	    T& operator=(const T &rhs) {
	      T	t = rhs;
	      *this = std::move(t);
	      return *this;
	    }

	    T& operator=(T &&rhs) {
	      p	= rhs.p;
	      rhs.p = nullptr;
	      return *this;
	    }
	  };

       WarnOnlyIfThisHasSuspiciousField
	      When true, the check will	warn only if the  container  class  of
	      the  copy	assignment operator has	any suspicious fields (pointer
	      or C array). This	option is set to true by default.

   bugprone-unused-raii
       Finds temporaries that look like	RAII objects.

       The canonical example for this is a scoped lock.

	  {
	    scoped_lock(&global_mutex);
	    critical_section();
	  }

       The destructor of the scoped_lock is called before the critical_section
       is entered, leaving it unprotected.

       We apply	a number of heuristics to reduce the false positive  count  of
       this check:

        Ignore	 code  expanded	from macros. Testing frameworks	make heavy use
	 of this.

        Ignore	types with trivial destructors.	They are very unlikely	to  be
	 RAII objects and there's no difference	when they are deleted.

        Ignore	objects	at the end of a	compound statement (doesn't change be-
	 havior).

        Ignore	objects	returned from a	call.

   bugprone-unused-return-value
       Warns  on  unused  function return values. The checked functions	can be
       configured.

   Options
       CheckedFunctions
	      Semicolon-separated list of functions to check. The function  is
	      checked  if  the name and	scope matches, with any	arguments.  By
	      default  the  following  functions  are	checked:   std::async,
	      std::launder,    std::remove,    std::remove_if,	  std::unique,
	      std::unique_ptr::release,	 std::basic_string::empty,   std::vec-
	      tor::empty,    std::back_inserter,   std::distance,   std::find,
	      std::find_if, std::inserter,  std::lower_bound,  std::make_pair,
	      std::map::count,	    std::map::find,	std::map::lower_bound,
	      std::multimap::equal_range,	   std::multimap::upper_bound,
	      std::set::count,	std::set::find,	 std::setfill,	std::setpreci-
	      sion,  std::setw,	 std::upper_bound,  std::vector::at,  bsearch,
	      ferror,  feof,  isalnum, isalpha,	isblank, iscntrl, isdigit, is-
	      graph, islower, isprint, ispunct,	 isspace,  isupper,  iswalnum,
	      iswprint,	 iswspace,  isxdigit, memchr, memcmp, strcmp, strcoll,
	      strncmp, strpbrk,	strrchr, strspn, strstr, wcscmp, access, bind,
	      connect, difftime, dlsym,	fnmatch, getaddrinfo,  getopt,	htonl,
	      htons,  iconv_open, inet_addr, isascii, isatty, mmap, newlocale,
	      openat,	 pathconf,     pthread_equal,	  pthread_getspecific,
	      pthread_mutex_trylock,   readdir,	 readlink,  recvmsg,  regexec,
	      scandir, semget, setjmp,	shm_open,  shmget,  sigismember,  str-
	      casecmp, strsignal, ttyname

	      	std::async().  Not  using the return value makes the call syn-
		chronous.

	      	std::launder().	Not using the return value usually means  that
		the  function  interface  was misunderstood by the programmer.
		Only the returned pointer is "laundered", not the argument.

	      	std::remove(), std::remove_if()	 and  std::unique().  The  re-
		turned	iterator  indicates  the  boundary between elements to
		keep and elements to be	removed. Not using  the	 return	 value
		means  that  the information about which elements to remove is
		lost.

	      	std::unique_ptr::release(). Not	using  the  return  value  can
		lead  to  resource leaks if the	same pointer isn't stored any-
		where else. Often, ignoring the	release() return  value	 indi-
		cates that the programmer confused the function	with reset().

	      	std::basic_string::empty() and std::vector::empty(). Not using
		the  return value often	indicates that the programmer confused
		the function with clear().

       cert-err33-c is an alias	of this	check that checks a  fixed  and	 large
       set of standard library functions.

   bugprone-use-after-move
       Warns if	an object is used after	it has been moved, for example:

	  std::string str = "Hello, world!\n";
	  std::vector<std::string> messages;
	  messages.emplace_back(std::move(str));
	  std::cout << str;

       The last	line will trigger a warning that str is	used after it has been
       moved.

       The check does not trigger a warning if the object is reinitialized af-
       ter the move and	before the use.	For example, no	warning	will be	output
       for this	code:

	  messages.emplace_back(std::move(str));
	  str =	"Greetings, stranger!\n";
	  std::cout << str;

       Subsections below explain more precisely	what exactly the check consid-
       ers to be a move, use, and reinitialization.

       The check takes control flow into account. A warning is only emitted if
       the  use	 can  be  reached from the move. This means that the following
       code does not produce a warning:

	  if (condition) {
	    messages.emplace_back(std::move(str));
	  } else {
	    std::cout << str;
	  }

       On the other hand, the following	code does produce a warning:

	  for (int i = 0; i < 10; ++i) {
	    std::cout << str;
	    messages.emplace_back(std::move(str));
	  }

       (The use-after-move happens on the second iteration of the loop.)

       In some cases, the check	may not	be able	to detect  that	 two  branches
       are mutually exclusive. For example (assuming that i is an int):

	  if (i	== 1) {
	    messages.emplace_back(std::move(str));
	  }
	  if (i	== 2) {
	    std::cout << str;
	  }

       In this case, the check will erroneously	produce	a warning, even	though
       it  is  not possible for	both the move and the use to be	executed. More
       formally, the analysis is flow-sensitive	but not	path-sensitive.

   Silencing erroneous warnings
       An erroneous warning can	be silenced by reinitializing the object after
       the move:

	  if (i	== 1) {
	    messages.emplace_back(std::move(str));
	    str	= "";
	  }
	  if (i	== 2) {
	    std::cout << str;
	  }

       If you want to avoid the	overhead of actually  reinitializing  the  ob-
       ject,  you  can create a	dummy function that causes the check to	assume
       the object was reinitialized:

	  template <class T>
	  void IS_INITIALIZED(T&) {}

       You can use this	as follows:

	  if (i	== 1) {
	    messages.emplace_back(std::move(str));
	  }
	  if (i	== 2) {
	    IS_INITIALIZED(str);
	    std::cout << str;
	  }

       The check will not output a warning in this case	 because  passing  the
       object  to  a  function as a non-const pointer or reference counts as a
       reinitialization	(see section Reinitialization below).

   Unsequenced moves, uses, and	reinitializations
       In many cases, C++ does not make	any  guarantees	 about	the  order  in
       which  sub-expressions of a statement are evaluated. This means that in
       code like the following,	it is not guaranteed whether the use will hap-
       pen before or after the move:

	  void f(int i,	std::vector<int> v);
	  std::vector<int> v = { 1, 2, 3 };
	  f(v[1], std::move(v));

       In this kind of situation, the check will note that the	use  and  move
       are unsequenced.

       The  check will also take sequencing rules into account when reinitial-
       izations	occur in the same statement as moves or	uses. A	 reinitializa-
       tion  is	only considered	to reinitialize	a variable if it is guaranteed
       to be evaluated after the move and before the use.

   Move
       The check currently only	considers calls	of std::move  on  local	 vari-
       ables  or  function parameters. It does not check moves of member vari-
       ables or	global variables.

       Any call	of std::move on	a variable is considered to cause  a  move  of
       that  variable,	even  if  the  result of std::move is not passed to an
       rvalue reference	parameter.

       This means that the check will flag a use-after-move  even  on  a  type
       that  does  not	define a move constructor or move assignment operator.
       This is intentional.  Developers	may use	std::move on such  a  type  in
       the expectation that the	type will add move semantics in	the future. If
       such  a	std::move has the potential to cause a use-after-move, we want
       to warn about it	even if	the type does  not  implement  move  semantics
       yet.

       Furthermore,  if	 the result of std::move is passed to an rvalue	refer-
       ence parameter, this will always	be considered to cause a move, even if
       the function that consumes this parameter does not move from it,	or  if
       it does so only conditionally. For example, in the following situation,
       the check will assume that a move always	takes place:

	  std::vector<std::string> messages;
	  void f(std::string &&str) {
	    // Only remember the message if it isn't empty.
	    if (!str.empty()) {
	      messages.emplace_back(std::move(str));
	    }
	  }
	  std::string str = "";
	  f(std::move(str));

       The check will assume that the last line	causes a move, even though, in
       this particular case, it	does not. Again, this is intentional.

       There  is  one  special	case: A	call to	std::move inside a try_emplace
       call is conservatively assumed not to move. This	is to  avoid  spurious
       warnings,  as the check has no way to reason about the bool returned by
       try_emplace.

       When analyzing the order	in which  moves,  uses	and  reinitializations
       happen  (see  section  Unsequenced moves, uses, and reinitializations),
       the move	is assumed to occur in whichever function the  result  of  the
       std::move is passed to.

   Use
       Any  occurrence	of  the	 moved variable	that is	not a reinitialization
       (see below) is considered to be a use.

       An  exception  to   this	  are	objects	  of   type   std::unique_ptr,
       std::shared_ptr	and  std::weak_ptr,  which  have defined move behavior
       (objects	of these classes are guaranteed	to be empty  after  they  have
       been  moved  from).  Therefore, an object of these classes will only be
       considered to be	used if	it is dereferenced, i.e. if operator*,	opera-
       tor-> or	operator[] (in the case	of std::unique_ptr<T []>) is called on
       it.

       If  multiple  uses  occur  after	 a  move,  only	 the first of these is
       flagged.

   Reinitialization
       The check considers a variable to be  reinitialized  in	the  following
       cases:

	   The	variable occurs	on the left-hand side of an assignment.

	   The	 variable  is  passed  to a function as	a non-const pointer or
	    non-const lvalue reference.	(It is assumed that the	 variable  may
	    be an out-parameter	for the	function.)

	   clear()  or	assign() is called on the variable and the variable is
	    of one of  the  standard  container	 types	basic_string,  vector,
	    deque,  forward_list,  list,  set,	map,  multiset,	 multimap, un-
	    ordered_set,  unordered_map,  unordered_multiset,	unordered_mul-
	    timap.

	   reset()  is	 called	 on  the  variable and the variable is of type
	    std::unique_ptr, std::shared_ptr or	std::weak_ptr.

	   A member function marked  with  the	 [[clang::reinitializes]]  at-
	    tribute is called on the variable.

       If  the variable	in question is a struct	and an individual member vari-
       able of that struct is written to, the check does not consider this  to
       be  a  reinitialization -- even if, eventually, all member variables of
       the struct are written to. For example:

	  struct S {
	    std::string	str;
	    int	i;
	  };
	  S s =	{ "Hello, world!\n", 42	};
	  S s_other = std::move(s);
	  s.str	= "Lorem ipsum";
	  s.i =	99;

       The check will not consider s to	be reinitialized after the last	 line;
       instead,	 the  line  that assigns to s.str will be flagged as a use-af-
       ter-move.  This is intentional as  this	pattern	 of  reinitializing  a
       struct  is  error-prone.	 For example, if an additional member variable
       is added	to S, it is easy to forget to  add  the	 reinitialization  for
       this  additional	 member.  Instead, it is safer to assign to the	entire
       struct in one go, and this will also avoid the use-after-move warning.

   bugprone-virtual-near-miss
       Warn if a function is a near miss (i.e. the name	is  very  similar  and
       the  function  signature	is the same) to	a virtual function from	a base
       class.

       Example:

	  struct Base {
	    virtual void func();
	  };

	  struct Derived : Base	{
	    virtual void funk();
	    // warning:	'Derived::funk'	has a similar name and the same	signature as virtual method 'Base::func'; did you mean to override it?
	  };

   cert-con36-c
       The    cert-con36-c    check    is     an     alias,	please	   see
       bugprone-spuriously-wake-up-functions for more information.

   cert-con54-cpp
       The     cert-con54-cpp	  check	   is	 an    alias,	 please	   see
       bugprone-spuriously-wake-up-functions for more information.

   cert-dcl03-c
       The cert-dcl03-c	check is an alias, please see  misc-static-assert  for
       more information.

   cert-dcl16-c
       The     cert-dcl16-c	check	  is	 an    alias,	 please	   see
       readability-uppercase-literal-suffix for	more information.

   cert-dcl21-cpp
       This check flags	postfix	operator++ and operator-- declarations if  the
       return  type  is	not a const object. This also warns if the return type
       is a reference type.

       The object returned by a	postfix	increment  or  decrement  operator  is
       supposed	 to be a snapshot of the object's value	prior to modification.
       With such an implementation, any	modifications made  to	the  resulting
       object  from calling operator++(int) would be modifying a temporary ob-
       ject. Thus, such	an implementation of a postfix increment or  decrement
       operator	 should	 instead return	a const	object,	prohibiting accidental
       mutation	of a temporary object.	Similarly, it is  unexpected  for  the
       postfix	operator  to return a reference	to its previous	state, and any
       subsequent modifications	would be operating on a	stale object.

       This check corresponds to the CERT C++ Coding  Standard	recommendation
       DCL21-CPP.  Overloaded postfix increment	and decrement operators	should
       return a	const object. However, all of the  CERT	 recommendations  have
       been  removed  from public view,	and so their justification for the be-
       havior of this check requires an	account	on their wiki to view.

   cert-dcl37-c
       The    cert-dcl37-c    check    is     an     alias,	please	   see
       bugprone-reserved-identifier for	more information.

   cert-dcl50-cpp
       This  check  flags  all	function definitions (but not declarations) of
       C-style variadic	functions.

       This check corresponds to the CERT C++ Coding Standard rule  DCL50-CPP.
       Do not define a C-style variadic	function.

   cert-dcl51-cpp
       The     cert-dcl51-cpp	  check	   is	 an    alias,	 please	   see
       bugprone-reserved-identifier for	more information.

   cert-dcl54-cpp
       The    cert-dcl54-cpp	check	 is    an    alias,	please	   see
       misc-new-delete-overloads for more information.

   cert-dcl58-cpp
       Modification  of	the std	or posix namespace can result in undefined be-
       havior.	This check warns for such modifications.  The std  (or	posix)
       namespace  is  allowed to be extended with (class or function) template
       specializations that depend on an user-defined type (a type that	is not
       defined in the standard system headers).

       The check detects the following (user provided) declarations  in	 name-
       space std or posix:

        Anything that is not a	template specialization.

        Explicit specializations of any standard library function template or
	 class template, if it does not	have any user-defined type as template
	 argument.

        Explicit specializations of any member	function of a standard library
	 class template.

        Explicit  specializations  of any member function template of a stan-
	 dard library class or class template.

        Explicit or partial specialization of any member class	template of  a
	 standard library class	or class template.

       Examples:

	  namespace std	{
	    int	x; // warning: modification of 'std' namespace can result in undefined behavior	[cert-dcl58-cpp]
	  }

	  namespace posix::a { // warning: modification	of 'posix' namespace can result	in undefined behavior
	  }

	  template <>
	  struct ::std::hash<long> { //	warning: modification of 'std' namespace can result in undefined behavior
	    unsigned long operator()(const long	&K) const {
	      return K;
	    }
	  };

	  struct MyData	{ long data; };

	  template <>
	  struct ::std::hash<MyData> { // no warning: specialization with user-defined type
	    unsigned long operator()(const MyData &K) const {
	      return K.data;
	    }
	  };

	  namespace std	{
	    template <>
	    void swap<bool>(bool &a, bool &b); // warning: modification	of 'std' namespace can result in undefined behavior

	    template <>
	    bool less<void>::operator()<MyData &&, MyData &&>(MyData &&, MyData	&&) const { // warning:	modification of	'std' namespace	can result in undefined	behavior
	      return true;
	    }
	  }

       This  check corresponds to the CERT C++ Coding Standard rule DCL58-CPP.
       Do not modify the standard namespaces.

   cert-dcl59-cpp
       The    cert-dcl59-cpp	check	 is    an    alias,	please	   see
       google-build-namespaces for more	information.

   cert-env33-c
       This  check  flags calls	to system(), popen(), and _popen(), which exe-
       cute a command processor. It does not flag calls	 to  system()  with  a
       null pointer argument, as such a	call checks for	the presence of	a com-
       mand processor but does not actually attempt to execute a command.

       This  check  corresponds	to the CERT C Coding Standard rule ENV33-C. Do
       not call	system().

   cert-err09-cpp
       The    cert-err09-cpp	check	 is    an    alias,	please	   see
       misc-throw-by-value-catch-by-reference for more information.

       This  check  corresponds	to the CERT C++	Coding Standard	recommendation
       ERR09-CPP. Throw	anonymous temporaries. However,	all of the CERT	recom-
       mendations have been removed from public	view, and so their  justifica-
       tion  for  the behavior of this check requires an account on their wiki
       to view.

   cert-err33-c
       Warns on	unused function	return values. Many of	the  standard  library
       functions return	a value	that indicates if the call was successful. Ig-
       noring the returned value can cause unexpected behavior if an error has
       occured.	The following functions	are checked:

        aligned_alloc()

        asctime_s()

        at_quick_exit()

        atexit()

        bsearch()

        bsearch_s()

        btowc()

        c16rtomb()

        c32rtomb()

        calloc()

        clock()

        cnd_broadcast()

        cnd_init()

        cnd_signal()

        cnd_timedwait()

        cnd_wait()

        ctime_s()

        fclose()

        fflush()

        fgetc()

        fgetpos()

        fgets()

        fgetwc()

        fopen()

        fopen_s()

        fprintf()

        fprintf_s()

        fputc()

        fputs()

        fputwc()

        fputws()

        fread()

        freopen()

        freopen_s()

        fscanf()

        fscanf_s()

        fseek()

        fsetpos()

        ftell()

        fwprintf()

        fwprintf_s()

        fwrite()

        fwscanf()

        fwscanf_s()

        getc()

        getchar()

        getenv()

        getenv_s()

        gets_s()

        getwc()

        getwchar()

        gmtime()

        gmtime_s()

        localtime()

        localtime_s()

        malloc()

        mbrtoc16()

        mbrtoc32()

        mbsrtowcs()

        mbsrtowcs_s()

        mbstowcs()

        mbstowcs_s()

        memchr()

        mktime()

        mtx_init()

        mtx_lock()

        mtx_timedlock()

        mtx_trylock()

        mtx_unlock()

        printf_s()

        putc()

        putwc()

        raise()

        realloc()

        remove()

        rename()

        setlocale()

        setvbuf()

        scanf()

        scanf_s()

        signal()

        snprintf()

        snprintf_s()

        sprintf()

        sprintf_s()

        sscanf()

        sscanf_s()

        strchr()

        strerror_s()

        strftime()

        strpbrk()

        strrchr()

        strstr()

        strtod()

        strtof()

        strtoimax()

        strtok()

        strtok_s()

        strtol()

        strtold()

        strtoll()

        strtoumax()

        strtoul()

        strtoull()

        strxfrm()

        swprintf()

        swprintf_s()

        swscanf()

        swscanf_s()

        thrd_create()

        thrd_detach()

        thrd_join()

        thrd_sleep()

        time()

        timespec_get()

        tmpfile()

        tmpfile_s()

        tmpnam()

        tmpnam_s()

        tss_create()

        tss_get()

        tss_set()

        ungetc()

        ungetwc()

        vfprintf()

        vfprintf_s()

        vfscanf()

        vfscanf_s()

        vfwprintf()

        vfwprintf_s()

        vfwscanf()

        vfwscanf_s()

        vprintf_s()

        vscanf()

        vscanf_s()

        vsnprintf()

        vsnprintf_s()

        vsprintf()

        vsprintf_s()

        vsscanf()

        vsscanf_s()

        vswprintf()

        vswprintf_s()

        vswscanf()

        vswscanf_s()

        vwprintf_s()

        vwscanf()

        vwscanf_s()

        wcrtomb()

        wcschr()

        wcsftime()

        wcspbrk()

        wcsrchr()

        wcsrtombs()

        wcsrtombs_s()

        wcsstr()

        wcstod()

        wcstof()

        wcstoimax()

        wcstok()

        wcstok_s()

        wcstol()

        wcstold()

        wcstoll()

        wcstombs()

        wcstombs_s()

        wcstoumax()

        wcstoul()

        wcstoull()

        wcsxfrm()

        wctob()

        wctrans()

        wctype()

        wmemchr()

        wprintf_s()

        wscanf()

        wscanf_s()

       This  check  is	an  alias of check bugprone-unused-return-value	with a
       fixed set of functions.

       The check corresponds to	a part of CERT C Coding	Standard rule ERR33-C.
       Detect and handle standard library errors.  The list of	checked	 func-
       tions is	taken from the rule, with following exception:

        The check can not differentiate if a function is called with NULL ar-
	 gument.  Therefore  the  following  functions are not checked:	mblen,
	 mbrlen, mbrtowc, mbtowc, wctomb, wctomb_s

   cert-err34-c
       This check flags	calls to string-to-number conversion functions that do
       not verify the validity of the conversion, such as atoi()  or  scanf().
       It  does	not flag calls to strtol(), or other, related conversion func-
       tions that do perform better error checking.

	  #include <stdlib.h>

	  void func(const char *buff) {
	    int	si;

	    if (buff) {
	      si = atoi(buff); /* 'atoi' used to convert a string to an	integer, but function will
				   not report conversion errors; consider using	'strtol' instead. */
	    } else {
	      /* Handle	error */
	    }
	  }

       This check corresponds to the CERT C Coding Standard rule ERR34-C.  De-
       tect errors when	converting a string to a number.

   cert-err52-cpp
       This check flags	all call expressions involving setjmp()	and longjmp().

       This  check corresponds to the CERT C++ Coding Standard rule ERR52-CPP.
       Do not use setjmp() or longjmp().

   cert-err58-cpp
       This check flags	all static or thread_local variable declarations where
       the initializer for the object may throw	an exception.

       This check corresponds to the CERT C++ Coding Standard rule  ERR58-CPP.
       Handle all exceptions thrown before main() begins executing.

   cert-err60-cpp
       This  check  flags  all throw expressions where the exception object is
       not nothrow copy	constructible.

       This check corresponds to the CERT C++ Coding Standard rule  ERR60-CPP.
       Exception objects must be nothrow copy constructible.

   cert-err61-cpp
       The     cert-err61-cpp	  check	   is	 an    alias,	 please	   see
       misc-throw-by-value-catch-by-reference for more information.

   cert-exp42-c
       The    cert-exp42-c    check    is     an     alias,	please	   see
       bugprone-suspicious-memory-comparison for more information.

   cert-fio38-c
       The     cert-fio38-c	check	  is	 an    alias,	 please	   see
       misc-non-copyable-objects for more information.

   cert-flp30-c
       This check flags	for loops where	the induction expression has a	float-
       ing-point type.

       This  check  corresponds	to the CERT C Coding Standard rule FLP30-C. Do
       not use floating-point variables	as loop	counters.

   cert-flp37-c
       The    cert-flp37-c    check    is     an     alias,	please	   see
       bugprone-suspicious-memory-comparison for more information.

   cert-mem57-cpp
       This  check  flags  uses	of default operator new	where the type has ex-
       tended alignment	(an alignment greater than the fundamental alignment).
       (The default operator new is guaranteed to provide the  correct	align-
       ment  if	 the  requested	 alignment is less or equal to the fundamental
       alignment).  Only cases are detected (by	design)	where the operator new
       is not user-defined and is not a	placement new (the reason is  that  in
       these cases we assume that the user provided the	correct	memory alloca-
       tion).

       This  check corresponds to the CERT C++ Coding Standard rule MEM57-CPP.
       Avoid using default operator new	for over-aligned types.

   cert-msc30-c
       The cert-msc30-c	check is an alias, please see cert-msc50-cpp for  more
       information.

   cert-msc32-c
       The  cert-msc32-c check is an alias, please see cert-msc51-cpp for more
       information.

   cert-msc50-cpp
       Pseudorandom number generators use mathematical algorithms to produce a
       sequence	of numbers with	good statistical properties, but  the  numbers
       produced	 are  not  genuinely  random. The std::rand() function takes a
       seed (number), runs a mathematical operation on it and returns the  re-
       sult.  By  manipulating	the  seed  the result can be predictable. This
       check warns for the usage of std::rand().

   cert-msc51-cpp
       This check flags	all pseudo-random number engines, engine  adaptor  in-
       stantiations  and srand() when initialized or seeded with default argu-
       ment, constant expression or any	user-configurable type.	 Pseudo-random
       number  engines	seeded with a predictable value	may cause vulnerabili-
       ties e.g. in security protocols.	 This is a  CERT  security  rule,  see
       MSC51-CPP.  Ensure  your	random number generator	is properly seeded and
       MSC32-C.	Properly seed pseudorandom number generators.

       Examples:

	  void foo() {
	    std::mt19937 engine1; // Diagnose, always generate the same	sequence
	    std::mt19937 engine2(1); //	Diagnose
	    engine1.seed(); // Diagnose
	    engine2.seed(1); //	Diagnose

	    std::time_t	t;
	    engine1.seed(std::time(&t)); // Diagnose, system time might	be controlled by user

	    int	x = atoi(argv[1]);
	    std::mt19937 engine3(x);  // Will not warn
	  }

   Options
       DisallowedSeedTypes
	      A	comma-separated	list of	the type names which  are  disallowed.
	      Default values are time_t, std::time_t.

   cert-oop11-cpp
       The     cert-oop11-cpp	  check	   is	 an    alias,	 please	   see
       performance-move-constructor-init for more information.

       This check corresponds to the CERT C++ Coding  Standard	recommendation
       OOP11-CPP.  Do  not copy-initialize members or base classes from	a move
       constructor. However, all of the	CERT recommendations have been removed
       from public view, and so	their justification for	the behavior  of  this
       check requires an account on their wiki to view.

   cert-oop54-cpp
       The     cert-oop54-cpp	  check	   is	 an    alias,	 please	   see
       bugprone-unhandled-self-assignment for more information.

   cert-oop57-cpp
	  Flags	use of the C standard library  functions  memset,  memcpy  and
	  memcmp and similar derivatives on non-trivial	types.

   Options
       MemSetNames
	      Specify  extra  functions	 to flag that act similarly to memset.
	      Specify names in a semicolon  delimited  list.   Default	is  an
	      empty  string.   The  check will detect the following functions:
	      memset, std::memset.

       MemCpyNames
	      Specify extra functions to flag that act	similarly  to  memcpy.
	      Specify  names  in  a  semicolon	delimited list.	 Default is an
	      empty string.  The check will detect  the	 following  functions:
	      std::memcpy, memcpy, std::memmove, memmove, std::strcpy, strcpy,
	      memccpy, stpncpy,	strncpy.

       MemCmpNames
	      Specify  extra  functions	 to flag that act similarly to memcmp.
	      Specify names in a semicolon  delimited  list.   Default	is  an
	      empty  string.   The  check will detect the following functions:
	      std::memcmp, memcmp, std::strcmp,	strcmp,	strncmp.

       This check corresponds to the CERT C++ Coding Standard rule  OOP57-CPP.
       Prefer  special member functions	and overloaded operators to C Standard
       Library functions.

   cert-oop58-cpp
       Finds assignments to the	copied object and its direct or	indirect  mem-
       bers in copy constructors and copy assignment operators.

       This  check  corresponds	 to the	CERT C Coding Standard rule OOP58-CPP.
       Copy operations must not	mutate the source object.

   cert-pos44-c
       The    cert-pos44-c    check    is     an     alias,	please	   see
       bugprone-bad-signal-to-kill-thread for more information.

   cert-pos47-c
       The     cert-pos47-c	check	  is	 an    alias,	 please	   see
       concurrency-thread-canceltype-asynchronous for more information.

   cert-sig30-c
       The cert-sig30-c	check is an alias, please see  bugprone-signal-handler
       for more	information.

   cert-str34-c
       The     cert-str34-c	check	  is	 an    alias,	 please	   see
       bugprone-signed-char-misuse for more information.

   clang-analyzer-core.CallAndMessage
       The clang-analyzer-core.CallAndMessage check is an  alias,  please  see
       Clang Static Analyzer Available Checkers	for more information.

   clang-analyzer-core.DivideZero
       The  clang-analyzer-core.DivideZero check is an alias, please see Clang
       Static Analyzer Available Checkers for more information.

   clang-analyzer-core.DynamicTypePropagation
       Generate	dynamic	type information

   clang-analyzer-core.NonNullParamChecker
       The clang-analyzer-core.NonNullParamChecker check is an	alias,	please
       see Clang Static	Analyzer Available Checkers for	more information.

   clang-analyzer-core.NullDereference
       The  clang-analyzer-core.NullDereference	 check is an alias, please see
       Clang Static Analyzer Available Checkers	for more information.

   clang-analyzer-core.StackAddressEscape
       The clang-analyzer-core.StackAddressEscape check	is  an	alias,	please
       see Clang Static	Analyzer Available Checkers for	more information.

   clang-analyzer-core.UndefinedBinaryOperatorResult
       The   clang-analyzer-core.UndefinedBinaryOperatorResult	 check	is  an
       alias, please see Clang Static Analyzer Available Checkers for more in-
       formation.

   clang-analyzer-core.VLASize
       The clang-analyzer-core.VLASize check is	an  alias,  please  see	 Clang
       Static Analyzer Available Checkers for more information.

   clang-analyzer-core.uninitialized.ArraySubscript
       The clang-analyzer-core.uninitialized.ArraySubscript check is an	alias,
       please  see  Clang Static Analyzer Available Checkers for more informa-
       tion.

   clang-analyzer-core.uninitialized.Assign
       The clang-analyzer-core.uninitialized.Assign check is an	alias,	please
       see Clang Static	Analyzer Available Checkers for	more information.

   clang-analyzer-core.uninitialized.Branch
       The  clang-analyzer-core.uninitialized.Branch check is an alias,	please
       see Clang Static	Analyzer Available Checkers for	more information.

   clang-analyzer-core.uninitialized.CapturedBlockVariable
       Check for blocks	that capture uninitialized values

   clang-analyzer-core.uninitialized.UndefReturn
       The clang-analyzer-core.uninitialized.UndefReturn check	is  an	alias,
       please  see  Clang Static Analyzer Available Checkers for more informa-
       tion.

   clang-analyzer-cplusplus.InnerPointer
       Check for inner pointers	of C++ containers used after re/deallocation

   clang-analyzer-cplusplus.Move
       The clang-analyzer-cplusplus.Move check is an alias, please  see	 Clang
       Static Analyzer Available Checkers for more information.

   clang-analyzer-cplusplus.NewDelete
       The  clang-analyzer-cplusplus.NewDelete	check  is an alias, please see
       Clang Static Analyzer Available Checkers	for more information.

   clang-analyzer-cplusplus.NewDeleteLeaks
       The clang-analyzer-cplusplus.NewDeleteLeaks check is an	alias,	please
       see Clang Static	Analyzer Available Checkers for	more information.

   clang-analyzer-deadcode.DeadStores
       The  clang-analyzer-deadcode.DeadStores	check  is an alias, please see
       Clang Static Analyzer Available Checkers	for more information.

   clang-analyzer-nullability.NullPassedToNonnull
       The clang-analyzer-nullability.NullPassedToNonnull check	is  an	alias,
       please  see  Clang Static Analyzer Available Checkers for more informa-
       tion.

   clang-analyzer-nullability.NullReturnedFromNonnull
       The  clang-analyzer-nullability.NullReturnedFromNonnull	check  is   an
       alias, please see Clang Static Analyzer Available Checkers for more in-
       formation.

   clang-analyzer-nullability.NullableDereferenced
       The  clang-analyzer-nullability.NullableDereferenced check is an	alias,
       please see Clang	Static Analyzer	Available Checkers for	more  informa-
       tion.

   clang-analyzer-nullability.NullablePassedToNonnull
       The   clang-analyzer-nullability.NullablePassedToNonnull	 check	is  an
       alias, please see Clang Static Analyzer Available Checkers for more in-
       formation.

   clang-analyzer-nullability.NullableReturnedFromNonnull
       Warns when a nullable pointer is	returned  from	a  function  that  has
       _Nonnull	return type.

   clang-analyzer-optin.cplusplus.UninitializedObject
       The   clang-analyzer-optin.cplusplus.UninitializedObject	 check	is  an
       alias, please see Clang Static Analyzer Available Checkers for more in-
       formation.

   clang-analyzer-optin.cplusplus.VirtualCall
       The  clang-analyzer-optin.cplusplus.VirtualCall	check  is  an	alias,
       please  see  Clang Static Analyzer Available Checkers for more informa-
       tion.

   clang-analyzer-optin.mpi.MPI-Checker
       The clang-analyzer-optin.mpi.MPI-Checker	check is an alias, please  see
       Clang Static Analyzer Available Checkers	for more information.

   clang-analyzer-optin.osx.OSObjectCStyleCast
       Checker for C-style casts of OSObjects

   clang-analyzer-optin.osx.cocoa.localizability.EmptyLocalizationCon-
       textChecker
       The clang-analyzer-optin.osx.cocoa.localizability.EmptyLocalizationCon-
       textChecker  check is an	alias, please see Clang	Static Analyzer	Avail-
       able Checkers for more information.

   clang-analyzer-optin.osx.cocoa.localizability.NonLocalizedStringChecker
       The	   clang-analyzer-optin.osx.cocoa.localizability.NonLocalized-
       StringChecker  check  is	 an  alias,  please  see Clang Static Analyzer
       Available Checkers for more information.

   clang-analyzer-optin.performance.GCDAntipattern
       Check for performance anti-patterns when	using Grand Central Dispatch

   clang-analyzer-optin.performance.Padding
       Check for excessively padded structs.

   clang-analyzer-optin.portability.UnixAPI
       Finds implementation-defined behavior in	UNIX/Posix functions

   clang-analyzer-osx.API
       The clang-analyzer-osx.API check	is an alias, please see	 Clang	Static
       Analyzer	Available Checkers for more information.

   clang-analyzer-osx.MIG
       Find violations of the Mach Interface Generator calling convention

   clang-analyzer-osx.NumberObjectConversion
       Check  for  erroneous  conversions of objects representing numbers into
       numbers

   clang-analyzer-osx.OSObjectRetainCount
       Check for leaks and improper reference count management for OSObject

   clang-analyzer-osx.ObjCProperty
       Check for proper	uses of	Objective-C properties

   clang-analyzer-osx.SecKeychainAPI
       The clang-analyzer-osx.SecKeychainAPI check is  an  alias,  please  see
       Clang Static Analyzer Available Checkers	for more information.

   clang-analyzer-osx.cocoa.AtSync
       The clang-analyzer-osx.cocoa.AtSync check is an alias, please see Clang
       Static Analyzer Available Checkers for more information.

   clang-analyzer-osx.cocoa.AutoreleaseWrite
       Warn  about  potentially	 crashing writes to autoreleasing objects from
       different autoreleasing pools in	Objective-C

   clang-analyzer-osx.cocoa.ClassRelease
       The clang-analyzer-osx.cocoa.ClassRelease check is an alias, please see
       Clang Static Analyzer Available Checkers	for more information.

   clang-analyzer-osx.cocoa.Dealloc
       The clang-analyzer-osx.cocoa.Dealloc check  is  an  alias,  please  see
       Clang Static Analyzer Available Checkers	for more information.

   clang-analyzer-osx.cocoa.IncompatibleMethodTypes
       The clang-analyzer-osx.cocoa.IncompatibleMethodTypes check is an	alias,
       please  see  Clang Static Analyzer Available Checkers for more informa-
       tion.

   clang-analyzer-osx.cocoa.Loops
       Improved	modeling of loops using	Cocoa collection types

   clang-analyzer-osx.cocoa.MissingSuperCall
       Warn about Objective-C methods that lack	a necessary call to super

   clang-analyzer-osx.cocoa.NSAutoreleasePool
       The  clang-analyzer-osx.cocoa.NSAutoreleasePool	check  is  an	alias,
       please  see  Clang Static Analyzer Available Checkers for more informa-
       tion.

   clang-analyzer-osx.cocoa.NSError
       The clang-analyzer-osx.cocoa.NSError check  is  an  alias,  please  see
       Clang Static Analyzer Available Checkers	for more information.

   clang-analyzer-osx.cocoa.NilArg
       The clang-analyzer-osx.cocoa.NilArg check is an alias, please see Clang
       Static Analyzer Available Checkers for more information.

   clang-analyzer-osx.cocoa.NonNilReturnValue
       Model the APIs that are guaranteed to return a non-nil value

   clang-analyzer-osx.cocoa.ObjCGenerics
       The clang-analyzer-osx.cocoa.ObjCGenerics check is an alias, please see
       Clang Static Analyzer Available Checkers	for more information.

   clang-analyzer-osx.cocoa.RetainCount
       The  clang-analyzer-osx.cocoa.RetainCount check is an alias, please see
       Clang Static Analyzer Available Checkers	for more information.

   clang-analyzer-osx.cocoa.RunLoopAutoreleaseLeak
       Check for leaked	memory in autorelease pools that will never be drained

   clang-analyzer-osx.cocoa.SelfInit
       The clang-analyzer-osx.cocoa.SelfInit check is  an  alias,  please  see
       Clang Static Analyzer Available Checkers	for more information.

   clang-analyzer-osx.cocoa.SuperDealloc
       The clang-analyzer-osx.cocoa.SuperDealloc check is an alias, please see
       Clang Static Analyzer Available Checkers	for more information.

   clang-analyzer-osx.cocoa.UnusedIvars
       The  clang-analyzer-osx.cocoa.UnusedIvars check is an alias, please see
       Clang Static Analyzer Available Checkers	for more information.

   clang-analyzer-osx.cocoa.VariadicMethodTypes
       The clang-analyzer-osx.cocoa.VariadicMethodTypes	 check	is  an	alias,
       please  see  Clang Static Analyzer Available Checkers for more informa-
       tion.

   clang-analyzer-osx.coreFoundation.CFError
       The clang-analyzer-osx.coreFoundation.CFError check is an alias,	please
       see Clang Static	Analyzer Available Checkers for	more information.

   clang-analyzer-osx.coreFoundation.CFNumber
       The  clang-analyzer-osx.coreFoundation.CFNumber	check  is  an	alias,
       please  see  Clang Static Analyzer Available Checkers for more informa-
       tion.

   clang-analyzer-osx.coreFoundation.CFRetainRelease
       The  clang-analyzer-osx.coreFoundation.CFRetainRelease  check   is   an
       alias, please see Clang Static Analyzer Available Checkers for more in-
       formation.

   clang-analyzer-osx.coreFoundation.containers.OutOfBounds
       The  clang-analyzer-osx.coreFoundation.containers.OutOfBounds  check is
       an alias, please	see Clang Static Analyzer Available Checkers for  more
       information.

   clang-analyzer-osx.coreFoundation.containers.PointerSizedValues
       The     clang-analyzer-osx.coreFoundation.containers.PointerSizedValues
       check is	an alias, please see Clang Static Analyzer Available  Checkers
       for more	information.

   clang-analyzer-security.FloatLoopCounter
       The  clang-analyzer-security.FloatLoopCounter check is an alias,	please
       see Clang Static	Analyzer Available Checkers for	more information.

   clang-analyzer-security.insecureAPI.DeprecatedOrUnsafeBufferHandling
       The    clang-analyzer-security.insecureAPI.DeprecatedOrUnsafeBufferHan-
       dling  check  is	 an  alias, please see Clang Static Analyzer Available
       Checkers	for more information.

   clang-analyzer-security.insecureAPI.UncheckedReturn
       The  clang-analyzer-security.insecureAPI.UncheckedReturn	 check	is  an
       alias, please see Clang Static Analyzer Available Checkers for more in-
       formation.

   clang-analyzer-security.insecureAPI.bcmp
       The  clang-analyzer-security.insecureAPI.bcmp check is an alias,	please
       see Clang Static	Analyzer Available Checkers for	more information.

   clang-analyzer-security.insecureAPI.bcopy
       The clang-analyzer-security.insecureAPI.bcopy check is an alias,	please
       see Clang Static	Analyzer Available Checkers for	more information.

   clang-analyzer-security.insecureAPI.bzero
       The clang-analyzer-security.insecureAPI.bzero check is an alias,	please
       see Clang Static	Analyzer Available Checkers for	more information.

   clang-analyzer-security.insecureAPI.getpw
       The clang-analyzer-security.insecureAPI.getpw check is an alias,	please
       see Clang Static	Analyzer Available Checkers for	more information.

   clang-analyzer-security.insecureAPI.gets
       The clang-analyzer-security.insecureAPI.gets check is an	alias,	please
       see Clang Static	Analyzer Available Checkers for	more information.

   clang-analyzer-security.insecureAPI.mkstemp
       The  clang-analyzer-security.insecureAPI.mkstemp	 check	is  an	alias,
       please see Clang	Static Analyzer	Available Checkers for	more  informa-
       tion.

   clang-analyzer-security.insecureAPI.mktemp
       The   clang-analyzer-security.insecureAPI.mktemp	 check	is  an	alias,
       please see Clang	Static Analyzer	Available Checkers for	more  informa-
       tion.

   clang-analyzer-security.insecureAPI.rand
       The  clang-analyzer-security.insecureAPI.rand check is an alias,	please
       see Clang Static	Analyzer Available Checkers for	more information.

   clang-analyzer-security.insecureAPI.strcpy
       The  clang-analyzer-security.insecureAPI.strcpy	check  is  an	alias,
       please  see  Clang Static Analyzer Available Checkers for more informa-
       tion.

   clang-analyzer-security.insecureAPI.vfork
       The clang-analyzer-security.insecureAPI.vfork check is an alias,	please
       see Clang Static	Analyzer Available Checkers for	more information.

   clang-analyzer-unix.API
       The clang-analyzer-unix.API check is an alias, please see Clang	Static
       Analyzer	Available Checkers for more information.

   clang-analyzer-unix.Malloc
       The clang-analyzer-unix.Malloc check is an alias, please	see Clang Sta-
       tic Analyzer Available Checkers for more	information.

   clang-analyzer-unix.MallocSizeof
       The  clang-analyzer-unix.MallocSizeof  check  is	 an  alias, please see
       Clang Static Analyzer Available Checkers	for more information.

   clang-analyzer-unix.MismatchedDeallocator
       The clang-analyzer-unix.MismatchedDeallocator check is an alias,	please
       see Clang Static	Analyzer Available Checkers for	more information.

   clang-analyzer-unix.Vfork
       The clang-analyzer-unix.Vfork check is an alias,	please see Clang  Sta-
       tic Analyzer Available Checkers for more	information.

   clang-analyzer-unix.cstring.BadSizeArg
       The  clang-analyzer-unix.cstring.BadSizeArg  check  is an alias,	please
       see Clang Static	Analyzer Available Checkers for	more information.

   clang-analyzer-unix.cstring.NullArg
       The clang-analyzer-unix.cstring.NullArg check is	an alias,  please  see
       Clang Static Analyzer Available Checkers	for more information.

   clang-analyzer-valist.CopyToSelf
       Check for va_lists which	are copied onto	itself.

   clang-analyzer-valist.Uninitialized
       Check for usages	of uninitialized (or already released) va_lists.

   clang-analyzer-valist.Unterminated
       Check for va_lists which	are not	released by a va_end call.

   concurrency-mt-unsafe
       Checks  for  some  thread-unsafe	 functions  against  a	black  list of
       known-to-be-unsafe functions.  Usually  they  access  static  variables
       without	synchronization	 (e.g. gmtime(3)) or utilize signals in	a racy
       way.  The set of	functions to check is specified	with  the  FunctionSet
       option.

       Note that using some thread-unsafe functions may	be still valid in con-
       current	programming  if	only a single thread is	used (e.g. setenv(3)),
       however,	some functions may track a state  in  global  variables	 which
       would  be  clobbered by subsequent (non-parallel, but concurrent) calls
       to a related function. E.g. the following code suffers from unprotected
       accesses	to a global state:

	  // getnetent(3) maintains global state with DB connection, etc.
	  // If	a concurrent green thread calls	getnetent(3), the global state is corrupted.
	  netent = getnetent();
	  yield();
	  netent = getnetent();

       Examples:

	  tm = gmtime(timep); // uses a	global buffer

	  sleep(1); // implementation may use SIGALRM

       FunctionSet
	      Specifies	 which	functions  in  libc   should   be   considered
	      thread-safe, possible values are posix, glibc, or	any.

	      posix  means POSIX defined thread-unsafe functions. POSIX.1-2001
	      in "2.9.1	Thread-Safety" defines that all	functions specified in
	      the  standard  are  thread-safe  except  a  predefined  list  of
	      thread-unsafe functions.

	      Glibc defines some of them as thread-safe	(e.g. dirname(3)), but
	      adds non-POSIX thread-unsafe ones	(e.g. getopt_long(3)). Glibc's
	      list  is	compiled  from GNU web documentation with a search for
	      MT-Safe							  tag:
	      https://www.gnu.org/software/libc/manual/html_node/POSIX-Safety-Concepts.html

	      If  you want to identify thread-unsafe API for at	least one libc
	      or unsure	which libc will	be used, use any (default).

   concurrency-thread-canceltype-asynchronous
       Finds pthread_setcanceltype function calls where	a  thread's  cancella-
       tion  type  is  set  to	asynchronous.  Asynchronous  cancellation type
       (PTHREAD_CANCEL_ASYNCHRONOUS)   is   generally	unsafe,	   use	  type
       PTHREAD_CANCEL_DEFERRED	instead	 which	is  the	default. Even with de-
       ferred cancellation, a cancellation point  in  an  asynchronous	signal
       handler may still be acted upon and the effect is as if it was an asyn-
       chronous	cancellation.

       This  check  corresponds	to the CERT C Coding Standard rule POS47-C. Do
       not use threads that can	be canceled asynchronously.

   cppcoreguidelines-avoid-c-arrays
       The cppcoreguidelines-avoid-c-arrays check  is  an  alias,  please  see
       modernize-avoid-c-arrays	for more information.

   cppcoreguidelines-avoid-goto
       The  usage  of  goto  for control flow is error prone and should	be re-
       placed with looping constructs. Only forward jumps in nested loops  are
       accepted.

       This  check  implements ES.76 from the CppCoreGuidelines	and 6.3.1 from
       High Integrity C++.

       For more	information on why to avoid programming	with goto you can read
       the famous paper	A Case against the GO TO Statement..

       The check diagnoses goto	for backward jumps  in	every  language	 mode.
       These should be replaced	with C/C++ looping constructs.

	  // Bad, handwritten for loop.
	  int i	= 0;
	  // Jump label	for the	loop
	  loop_start:
	  do_some_operation();

	  if (i	< 100) {
	    ++i;
	    goto loop_start;
	  }

	  // Better
	  for(int i = 0; i < 100; ++i)
	    do_some_operation();

       Modern C++ needs	goto only to jump out of nested	loops.

	  for(int i = 0; i < 100; ++i) {
	    for(int j =	0; j < 100; ++j) {
	      if (i * j	> 500)
		goto early_exit;
	    }
	  }

	  early_exit:
	  some_operation();

       All other uses of goto are diagnosed in C++.

   cppcoreguidelines-avoid-magic-numbers
       The cppcoreguidelines-avoid-magic-numbers check is an alias, please see
       readability-magic-numbers for more information.

   cppcoreguidelines-avoid-non-const-global-variables
       Finds non-const global variables	as described in	I.2 of C++ Core	Guide-
       lines  .	  As  R.6 of C++ Core Guidelines is a duplicate	of rule	I.2 it
       also covers that	rule.

	  char a;  // Warns!
	  const	char b =  0;

	  namespace some_namespace
	  {
	      char c;  // Warns!
	      const char d = 0;
	  }

	  char * c_ptr1	= &some_namespace::c;  // Warns!
	  char *const c_const_ptr = &some_namespace::c;	 // Warns!
	  char & c_reference = some_namespace::c;  // Warns!

	  class	Foo  //	No Warnings inside Foo,	only namespace scope is	covered
	  {
	  public:
	      char e = 0;
	      const char f = 0;
	  protected:
	      char g = 0;
	  private:
	      char h = 0;
	  };

       Variables: a, c,	c_ptr1,	c_ptr2,	c_const_ptr and	c_reference, will  all
       generate	warnings since they are	either:	a globally accessible variable
       and  non-const,	a  pointer  or	reference  providing  global access to
       non-const data or both.

   cppcoreguidelines-c-copy-assignment-signature
       The cppcoreguidelines-c-copy-assignment-signature check	is  an	alias,
       please see misc-unconventional-assign-operator for more information.

   cppcoreguidelines-explicit-virtual-functions
       The  cppcoreguidelines-explicit-virtual-functions  check	 is  an	alias,
       please see modernize-use-override for more information.

   cppcoreguidelines-init-variables
       Checks whether there are	local variables	that are declared  without  an
       initial value. These may	lead to	unexpected behavior if there is	a code
       path that reads the variable before assigning to	it.

       Only  integers, booleans, floats, doubles and pointers are checked. The
       fix option initializes all detected values with the value of  zero.  An
       exception is float and double types, which are initialized to NaN.

       As an example a function	that looks like	this:

	  void function() {
	    int	x;
	    char *txt;
	    double d;

	    // Rest of the function.
	  }

       Would be	rewritten to look like this:

	  #include <math.h>

	  void function() {
	    int	x = 0;
	    char *txt =	nullptr;
	    double d = NAN;

	    // Rest of the function.
	  }

       It warns	for the	uninitialized enum case, but without a FixIt:

	  enum A {A1, A2, A3};
	  enum A_c : char { A_c1, A_c2,	A_c3 };
	  enum class B { B1, B2, B3 };
	  enum class B_i : int { B_i1, B_i2, B_i3 };
	  void function() {
	    A a;     //	Warning: variable 'a' is not initialized
	    A_c	a_c; //	Warning: variable 'a_c'	is not initialized
	    B b;     //	Warning: variable 'b' is not initialized
	    B_i	b_i; //	Warning: variable 'b_i'	is not initialized
	  }

   Options
       IncludeStyle
	      A	string specifying which	include-style is used, llvm or google.
	      Default is llvm.

       MathHeader
	      A	 string	specifying the header to include to get	the definition
	      of NAN.  Default is <math.h>.

   cppcoreguidelines-interfaces-global-init
       This check flags	initializers of	globals	that  access  extern  objects,
       and therefore can lead to order-of-initialization problems.

       This  rule  is  part of the "Interfaces"	profile	of the C++ Core	Guide-
       lines,								   see
       https://github.com/isocpp/CppCoreGuidelines/blob/master/CppCoreGuidelines.md#Ri-global-init

       Note  that  currently  this  does not flag calls	to non-constexpr func-
       tions, and therefore globals could still	 be  accessed  from  functions
       themselves.

   cppcoreguidelines-macro-to-enum
       The  cppcoreguidelines-macro-to-enum  check  is	an  alias,  please see
       modernize-macro-to-enum for more	information.

   cppcoreguidelines-macro-usage
       Finds macro usage that is considered problematic	 because  better  lan-
       guage constructs	exist for the task.

       The relevant sections in	the C++	Core Guidelines	are ES.31, and ES.32.

       Examples:

	  #define C 0
	  #define F1(x,	y) ((a)	> (b) ?	(a) : (b))
	  #define F2(...) (__VA_ARGS__)
	  #define COMMA	,
	  #define NORETURN [[noreturn]]
	  #define DEPRECATED attribute((deprecated))
	  #if LIB_EXPORTS
	  #define DLLEXPORTS __declspec(dllexport)
	  #else
	  #define DLLEXPORTS __declspec(dllimport)
	  #endif

       results in the following	warnings:

	  4 warnings generated.
	  test.cpp:1:9:	warning: macro 'C' used	to declare a constant; consider	using a	'constexpr' constant [cppcoreguidelines-macro-usage]
	  #define C 0
		  ^
	  test.cpp:2:9:	warning: function-like macro 'F1' used;	consider a 'constexpr' template	function [cppcoreguidelines-macro-usage]
	  #define F1(x,	y) ((a)	> (b) ?	(a) : (b))
		  ^
	  test.cpp:3:9:	warning: variadic macro	'F2' used; consider using a 'constexpr'	variadic template function [cppcoreguidelines-macro-usage]
	  #define F2(...) (__VA_ARGS__)
		  ^

   Options
       AllowedRegexp
	      A	 regular  expression to	filter allowed macros. For example DE-
	      BUG*|LIBTORRENT*|TORRENT*|UNI*  could  be	 applied   to	filter
	      libtorrent.  Default value is ^DEBUG_*.

       CheckCapsOnly
	      Boolean  flag  to	warn on	all macros except those	with CAPS_ONLY
	      names.  This option is intended to  ease	introduction  of  this
	      check into older code bases. Default value is false.

       IgnoreCommandLineMacros
	      Boolean  flag  to	 toggle	 ignoring command-line-defined macros.
	      Default value is true.

   cppcoreguidelines-narrowing-conversions
       Checks for silent narrowing conversions,	e.g: int i =  0;  i  +=	 0.1;.
       While  the  issue is obvious in this former example, it might not be so
       in the following: void MyClass::f(double	d) { int_member_ += d; }.

       This rule is part of the	"Expressions and statements"  profile  of  the
       C++ Core	Guidelines, corresponding to rule ES.46. See

       https://github.com/isocpp/CppCoreGuidelines/blob/master/CppCoreGuidelines.md#es46-avoid-lossy-narrowing-truncating-arithmetic-conversions.

       We enforce only part of the guideline, more specifically, we flag nar-
       rowing conversions from:

	      	an  integer to a narrower integer (e.g.	char to	unsigned char)
		if WarnOnIntegerNarrowingConversion Option is set,

	      	an integer to a	 narrower  floating-point  (e.g.  uint64_t  to
		float)	if WarnOnIntegerToFloatingPointNarrowingConversion Op-
		tion is	set,

	      	a floating-point to an integer (e.g. double to int),

	      	a floating-point to a narrower floating-point (e.g. double  to
		float)	if  WarnOnFloatingPointNarrowingConversion  Option  is
		set.

       This check will flag:

	      	All narrowing conversions that are not marked by  an  explicit
		cast  (c-style	or  static_cast). For example: int i = 0; i +=
		0.1;, void f(int); f(0.1);,

	      	All applications of binary operators with a narrowing  conver-
		sions.	For example: int i; i+=	0.1;.

   Options
       WarnOnIntegerNarrowingConversion
	      When  true,  the check will warn on narrowing integer conversion
	      (e.g. int	to size_t). true by default.

       WarnOnIntegerToFloatingPointNarrowingConversion
	      When true, the check will	warn on	narrowing  integer  to	float-
	      ing-point	conversion (e.g. size_t	to double). true by default.

       WarnOnFloatingPointNarrowingConversion
	      When  true, the check will warn on narrowing floating point con-
	      version (e.g. double to float). true by default.

       WarnWithinTemplateInstantiation
	      When true, the check will	warn on	narrowing  conversions	within
	      template instantiations. false by	default.

       WarnOnEquivalentBitWidth
	      When  true,  the	check  will warn on narrowing conversions that
	      arise from casting between types of equivalent bit width.	 (e.g.
	      int n = uint(0); or long long n =	double(0);) true by default.

       IgnoreConversionFromTypes
	      Narrowing	 conversions from any type in this semicolon-separated
	      list will	be ignored. This may be	useful to  weed	 out  commonly
	      occurring, but less commonly problematic assignments such	as int
	      n	 = std::vector<char>().size(); or int n	= std::difference(it1,
	      it2);. The default list is empty,	but one	suggested list	for  a
	      legacy   codebase	 would	be  size_t;ptrdiff_t;size_type;differ-
	      ence_type.

       PedanticMode
	      When true, the check will	warn on	 assigning  a  floating	 point
	      constant to an integer value even	if the floating	point value is
	      exactly  representable  in  the  destination  type (e.g. int i =
	      1.0;).  false by default.

   FAQ
	   What does "narrowing conversion from 'int' to 'float'" mean?

       An IEEE754 Floating Point number	can represent all  integer  values  in
       the  range  [-2^PrecisionBits,  2^PrecisionBits]	where PrecisionBits is
       the number of bits in the mantissa.

       For float this would be [-2^23, 2^23], where int	can  represent	values
       in the range [-2^31, 2^31-1].

	   What does "implementation-defined" mean?

       You  may	have encountered messages like "narrowing conversion from 'un-
       signed int' to signed type 'int'	is implementation-defined".  The C/C++
       standard	does not mandate two's complement for signed integers, and  so
       the compiler is free to define what the semantics are for converting an
       unsigned	 integer  to  signed  integer. Clang's implementation uses the
       two's complement	format.

   cppcoreguidelines-no-malloc
       This check handles C-Style memory management using malloc(), realloc(),
       calloc()	and free(). It warns about its use and tries  to  suggest  the
       use  of	an appropriate RAII object.  Furthermore, it can be configured
       to check	against	a user-specified list of functions that	are  used  for
       memory management (e.g. posix_memalign()).  See C++ Core	Guidelines.

       There is	no attempt made	to provide fix-it hints, since manual resource
       management isn't	easily transformed automatically into RAII.

	  // Warns each	of the following lines.
	  // Containers	like std::vector or std::string	should be used.
	  char*	some_string = (char*) malloc(sizeof(char) * 20);
	  char*	some_string = (char*) realloc(sizeof(char) * 30);
	  free(some_string);

	  int* int_array = (int*) calloc(30, sizeof(int));

	  // Rather use	a smartpointer or stack	variable.
	  struct some_struct* s	= (struct some_struct*)	malloc(sizeof(struct some_struct));

   Options
       Allocations
	      Semicolon-separated  list	of fully qualified names of memory al-
	      location functions.  Defaults to ::malloc;::calloc.

       Deallocations
	      Semicolon-separated list of fully	qualified names	of memory  al-
	      location functions.  Defaults to ::free.

       Reallocations
	      Semicolon-separated  list	of fully qualified names of memory al-
	      location functions.  Defaults to ::realloc.

   cppcoreguidelines-non-private-member-variables-in-classes
       The cppcoreguidelines-non-private-member-variables-in-classes check  is
       an  alias,  please see misc-non-private-member-variables-in-classes for
       more information.

   cppcoreguidelines-owning-memory
       This check implements the type-based semantics of gsl::owner<T*>, which
       allows static analysis on code, that uses raw pointers  to  handle  re-
       sources like dynamic memory, but	won't introduce	RAII concepts.

       The  relevant  sections	in the C++ Core	Guidelines are I.11, C.33, R.3
       and GSL.Views The definition of a gsl::owner<T*>	is straight forward

	  namespace gsl	{ template <typename T>	owner =	T; }

       It is therefore simple to introduce the owner even without using	an im-
       plementation of the Guideline Support Library.

       All checks are purely type based	and not	(yet) flow sensitive.

       The following examples will demonstrate the correct and incorrect  ini-
       tializations  of	 owners, assignment is handled the same	way. Note that
       both new	and malloc()-like resource functions are considered to produce
       resources.

	  // Creating an owner with factory functions is checked.
	  gsl::owner<int*> function_that_returns_owner() { return gsl::owner<int*>(new int(42)); }

	  // Dynamic memory must be assigned to	an owner
	  int* Something = new int(42);	// BAD,	will be	caught
	  gsl::owner<int*> Owner = new int(42);	// Good
	  gsl::owner<int*> Owner = new int[42];	// Good	as well

	  // Returned owner must be assigned to	an owner
	  int* Something = function_that_returns_owner(); // Bad, factory function
	  gsl::owner<int*> Owner = function_that_returns_owner(); // Good, result lands	in owner

	  // Something not a resource or owner should not be assigned to owners
	  int Stack = 42;
	  gsl::owner<int*> Owned = &Stack; // Bad, not a resource assigned

       In the case of dynamic memory as	resource,  only	 gsl::owner<T*>	 vari-
       ables are allowed to be deleted.

	  // Example Bad, non-owner as resource	handle,	will be	caught.
	  int* NonOwner	= new int(42); // First	warning	here, since new	must land in an	owner
	  delete NonOwner; // Second warning here, since only owners are allowed to be deleted

	  // Example Good, Ownership correctly stated
	  gsl::owner<int*> Owner = new int(42);	// Good
	  delete Owner;	// Good	as well, statically enforced, that only	owners get deleted

       The  check  will	 furthermore  ensure,  that  functions,	 that expect a
       gsl::owner<T*> as argument get called with either a gsl::owner<T*> or a
       newly created resource.

	  void expects_owner(gsl::owner<int*> o) { delete o; }

	  // Bad Code
	  int NonOwner = 42;
	  expects_owner(&NonOwner); // Bad, will get caught

	  // Good Code
	  gsl::owner<int*> Owner = new int(42);
	  expects_owner(Owner);	// Good
	  expects_owner(new int(42)); // Good as well, recognized created resource

	  // Port legacy code for better resource-safety
	  gsl::owner<FILE*> File = fopen("my_file.txt",	"rw+");
	  FILE*	BadFile	= fopen("another_file.txt", "w"); // Bad, warned

	  // ... use the file

	  fclose(File);	// Ok, File is annotated as 'owner<>'
	  fclose(BadFile); // BadFile is not an	'owner<>', will	be warned

   Options
       LegacyResourceProducers
	      Semicolon-separated list of  fully  qualified  names  of	legacy
	      functions	  that	 create	  resources   but   cannot   introduce
	      gsl::owner<>.   Defaults	 to   ::malloc;::aligned_alloc;::real-
	      loc;::calloc;::fopen;::freopen;::tmpfile.

       LegacyResourceConsumers
	      Semicolon-separated  list	 of  fully  qualified  names of	legacy
	      functions	expecting resource owners  as  pointer	arguments  but
	      cannot   introduce  gsl::owner<>.	  Defaults  to	::free;::real-
	      loc;::freopen;::fclose.

   Limitations
       Using gsl::owner<T*> in a typedef or alias is not handled correctly.

	  using	heap_int = gsl::owner<int*>;
	  heap_int allocated = new int(42); // False positive!

       The gsl::owner<T*> is declared as a templated type alias.  In  template
       functions  and  classes,	 like in the example below, the	information of
       the type	aliases	gets lost. Therefore using gsl::owner<T*> in  a	 heavy
       templated code base might lead to false positives.

       Known code constructs that do not get diagnosed correctly are:

        std::exchange

        std::vector<gsl::owner<T*>>

	  // This template function works as expected. Type information	doesn't	get lost.
	  template <typename T>
	  void delete_owner(gsl::owner<T*> owned_object) {
	    delete owned_object; // Everything alright
	  }

	  gsl::owner<int*> function_that_returns_owner() { return gsl::owner<int*>(new int(42)); }

	  // Type deduction does not work for auto variables.
	  // This is caught by the check and will be noted accordingly.
	  auto OwnedObject = function_that_returns_owner(); // Type of OwnedObject will	be int*

	  // Problematic function template that	looses the typeinformation on owner
	  template <typename T>
	  void bad_template_function(T some_object) {
	    // This line will trigger the warning, that	a non-owner is assigned	to an owner
	    gsl::owner<T*> new_owner = some_object;
	  }

	  // Calling the function with an owner	still yields a false positive.
	  bad_template_function(gsl::owner<int*>(new int(42)));

	  // The same issue occurs with	templated classes like the following.
	  template <typename T>
	  class	OwnedValue {
	  public:
	    const T getValue() const { return _val; }
	  private:
	    T _val;
	  };

	  // Code, that	yields a false positive.
	  OwnedValue<gsl::owner<int*>> Owner(new int(42)); // Type deduction yield T ->	int *
	  // False positive, getValue returns int* and not gsl::owner<int*>
	  gsl::owner<int*> OwnedInt = Owner.getValue();

       Another limitation of the current implementation	is only	the type based
       checking.  Suppose you have code	like the following:

	  // Two owners	with assigned resources
	  gsl::owner<int*> Owner1 = new	int(42);
	  gsl::owner<int*> Owner2 = new	int(42);

	  Owner2 = Owner1; // Conceptual Leak of initial resource of Owner2!
	  Owner1 = nullptr;

       The  semantic  of a gsl::owner<T*> is mostly like a std::unique_ptr<T>,
       therefore assignment of two gsl::owner<T*> is considered	a move,	 which
       requires	 that  the  resource Owner2 must have been released before the
       assignment.  This kind of condition could be caught in  later  improve-
       ments  of  this check with flowsensitive	analysis. Currently, the Clang
       Static Analyzer catches this bug	for dynamic memory, but	not  for  gen-
       eral types of resources.

   cppcoreguidelines-prefer-member-initializer
       Finds member initializations in the constructor body which can be  con-
       verted  into  member  initializers of the constructor instead. This not
       only improves the readability of	the code but also  positively  affects
       its  performance.   Class-member	assignments inside a control statement
       or following the	first control statement	are ignored.

       This check implements C.49 from the CppCoreGuidelines.

       If the language version is C++ 11 or above, the constructor is the  de-
       fault  constructor  of  the class, the field is not a bitfield (only in
       case of earlier language	version	than C++ 20), furthermore the assigned
       value is	a literal, negated literal or enum constant then the preferred
       place of	the initialization is at the class member declaration.

       This latter rule	is C.48	from CppCoreGuidelines.

       Please note, that this check does not enforce this latter rule for ini-
       tializations already implemented	as member initializers.	For that  pur-
       pose see	check modernize-use-default-member-init.

   Example 1
	  class	C {
	    int	n;
	    int	m;
	  public:
	    C()	{
	      n	= 1; //	Literal	in default constructor
	      if (dice())
		return;
	      m	= 1;
	    }
	  };

       Here n can be initialized using a default member	initializer, unlike m,
       as m's initialization follows a control statement (if):

	  class	C {
	    int	n{1};
	    int	m;
	  public:
	    C()	{
	      if (dice())
		return;
	      m	= 1;
	    }

   Example 2
	  class	C {
	    int	n;
	    int	m;
	  public:
	    C(int nn, int mm) {
	      n	= nn; // Neither default constructor nor literal
	      if (dice())
		return;
	      m	= mm;
	    }
	  };

       Here  n	can be initialized in the constructor initialization list, un-
       like m, as m's initialization follows a control statement (if):

	  C(int	nn, int	mm) : n(nn) {
	    if (dice())
	      return;
	    m =	mm;
	  }

       UseAssignment
	      If this option is	set to true (default is	false),	the check will
	      initialize members with an assignment. In	this case the  fix  of
	      the first	example	looks like this:

	  class	C {
	    int	n = 1;
	    int	m;
	  public:
	    C()	{
	      if (dice())
		return;
	      m	= 1;
	    }
	  };

   cppcoreguidelines-pro-bounds-array-to-pointer-decay
       This check flags	all array to pointer decays.

       Pointers	 should	 not  be  used as arrays. span<T> is a bounds-checked,
       safe alternative	to using pointers to access arrays.

       This rule is part of the	"Bounds	safety"	profile	of the C++ Core	Guide-
       lines,								   see
       https://github.com/isocpp/CppCoreGuidelines/blob/master/CppCoreGuidelines.md#Pro-bounds-decay.

   cppcoreguidelines-pro-bounds-constant-array-index
       This  check  flags all array subscript expressions on static arrays and
       std::arrays that	either do not have a constant integer expression index
       or are out of bounds (for std::array). For  out-of-bounds  checking  of
       static arrays, see the -Warray-bounds Clang diagnostic.

       This rule is part of the	"Bounds	safety"	profile	of the C++ Core	Guide-
       lines,								   see
       https://github.com/isocpp/CppCoreGuidelines/blob/master/CppCoreGuidelines.md#Pro-bounds-arrayindex.

       Optionally, this	check can generate fixes using gsl::at for indexing.

   Options
       GslHeader
	      The check	can generate fixes after this option has been  set  to
	      the  name	 of  the  include  file	 that contains gsl::at(), e.g.
	      "gsl/gsl.h".

       IncludeStyle
	      A	string specifying which	include-style is used, llvm or google.
	      Default is llvm.

   cppcoreguidelines-pro-bounds-pointer-arithmetic
       This check flags	all usage of pointer arithmetic, because it could lead
       to an invalid pointer. Subtraction of two pointers is  not  flagged  by
       this check.

       Pointers	should only refer to single objects, and pointer arithmetic is
       fragile	and  easy to get wrong.	span<T>	is a bounds-checked, safe type
       for accessing arrays of data.

       This rule is part of the	"Bounds	safety"	profile	of the C++ Core	Guide-
       lines,								   see
       https://github.com/isocpp/CppCoreGuidelines/blob/master/CppCoreGuidelines.md#Pro-bounds-arithmetic.

   cppcoreguidelines-pro-type-const-cast
       This check flags	all uses of const_cast in C++ code.

       Modifying  a  variable  that  was declared const	is undefined behavior,
       even with const_cast.

       This rule is part of the	"Type safety" profile of the C++  Core	Guide-
       lines,								   see
       https://github.com/isocpp/CppCoreGuidelines/blob/master/CppCoreGuidelines.md#Pro-type-constcast.

   cppcoreguidelines-pro-type-cstyle-cast
       This check flags	all use	of C-style casts that  perform	a  static_cast
       downcast, const_cast, or	reinterpret_cast.

       Use of these casts can violate type safety and cause the	program	to ac-
       cess a variable that is actually	of type	X to be	accessed as if it were
       of an unrelated type Z. Note that a C-style (T)expression cast means to
       perform	the  first  of the following that is possible: a const_cast, a
       static_cast,  a	static_cast  followed  by  a  const_cast,  a  reinter-
       pret_cast,  or  a  reinterpret_cast followed by a const_cast. This rule
       bans (T)expression only when used to perform an unsafe cast.

       This rule is part of the	"Type safety" profile of the C++  Core	Guide-
       lines,								   see
       https://github.com/isocpp/CppCoreGuidelines/blob/master/CppCoreGuidelines.md#Pro-type-cstylecast.

   cppcoreguidelines-pro-type-member-init
       The check flags user-defined constructor	definitions that do  not  ini-
       tialize	all fields that	would be left in an undefined state by default
       construction,  e.g.  builtins,  pointers	 and  record   types   without
       user-provided  default  constructors containing at least	one such type.
       If these	fields aren't initialized, the constructor will	leave some  of
       the memory in an	undefined state.

       For  C++11  it  suggests	 fixes to add in-class field initializers. For
       older versions it inserts the field initializers	into  the  constructor
       initializer  list. It will also initialize any direct base classes that
       need to be zeroed in the	constructor initializer	list.

       The check takes assignment of fields in the constructor body  into  ac-
       count  but  generates false positives for fields	initialized in methods
       invoked in the constructor body.

       The check also flags variables with  automatic  storage	duration  that
       have  record types without a user-provided constructor and are not ini-
       tialized. The suggested fix is to zero initialize the variable  via  {}
       for C++11 and beyond or = {} for	older language versions.

   Options
       IgnoreArrays
	      If set to	true, the check	will not warn about array members that
	      are  not	zero-initialized  during construction. For performance
	      critical code, it	may be important to not	initialize  fixed-size
	      array members. Default is	false.

       UseAssignment
	      If set to	true, the check	will provide fix-its with literal ini-
	      tializers	( int i	= 0; ) instead of curly	braces ( int i{}; ).

       This  rule  is part of the "Type	safety"	profile	of the C++ Core	Guide-
       lines,	    corresponding	to	 rule	    Type.6.	   See
       https://github.com/isocpp/CppCoreGuidelines/blob/master/CppCoreGuidelines.md#Pro-type-memberinit.

   cppcoreguidelines-pro-type-reinterpret-cast
       This check flags	all uses of reinterpret_cast in	C++ code.

       Use of these casts can violate type safety and cause the	program	to ac-
       cess a variable that is actually	of type	X to be	accessed as if it were
       of an unrelated type Z.

       This  rule  is part of the "Type	safety"	profile	of the C++ Core	Guide-
       lines,								   see
       https://github.com/isocpp/CppCoreGuidelines/blob/master/CppCoreGuidelines.md#Pro-type-reinterpretcast.

   cppcoreguidelines-pro-type-static-cast-downcast
       This  check  flags  all	usages	of  static_cast, where a base class is
       casted to a derived class. In those cases, a fix-it is provided to con-
       vert the	cast to	a dynamic_cast.

       Use of these casts can violate type safety and cause the	program	to ac-
       cess a variable that is actually	of type	X to be	accessed as if it were
       of an unrelated type Z.

       This rule is part of the	"Type safety" profile of the C++  Core	Guide-
       lines,								   see
       https://github.com/isocpp/CppCoreGuidelines/blob/master/CppCoreGuidelines.md#Pro-type-downcast.

   cppcoreguidelines-pro-type-union-access
       This check flags	all access to members of unions. Passing unions	 as  a
       whole is	not flagged.

       Reading	from a union member assumes that member	was the	last one writ-
       ten, and	writing	to a union member assumes another member with  a  non-
       trivial	destructor  had	its destructor called. This is fragile because
       it cannot generally be enforced to be safe in the language and  so  re-
       lies on programmer discipline to	get it right.

       This  rule  is part of the "Type	safety"	profile	of the C++ Core	Guide-
       lines,								   see
       https://github.com/isocpp/CppCoreGuidelines/blob/master/CppCoreGuidelines.md#Pro-type-unions.

   cppcoreguidelines-pro-type-vararg
       This  check  flags all calls to c-style vararg functions	and all	use of
       va_arg.

       To allow	for SFINAE use of vararg functions, a call is not flagged if a
       literal 0 is passed as the only vararg argument.

       Passing to varargs assumes the correct type will	be read. This is frag-
       ile because it cannot generally be enforced to be safe in the  language
       and so relies on	programmer discipline to get it	right.

       This  rule  is part of the "Type	safety"	profile	of the C++ Core	Guide-
       lines,								   see
       https://github.com/isocpp/CppCoreGuidelines/blob/master/CppCoreGuidelines.md#Pro-type-varargs.

   cppcoreguidelines-slicing
       Flags slicing of	member variables or vtable. Slicing happens when copy-
       ing a derived object into a base	object:	the members of the derived ob-
       ject  (both member variables and	virtual	member functions) will be dis-
       carded. This can	be misleading especially for member function  slicing,
       for example:

	  struct B { int a; virtual int	f(); };
	  struct D : B { int b;	int f()	override; };

	  void use(B b)	{  // Missing reference, intended?
	    b.f();  // Calls B::f.
	  }

	  D d;
	  use(d);  // Slice.

       See   the   relevant   C++   Core   Guidelines  sections	 for  details:
       https://github.com/isocpp/CppCoreGuidelines/blob/master/CppCoreGuidelines.md#es63-dont-slice
       https://github.com/isocpp/CppCoreGuidelines/blob/master/CppCoreGuidelines.md#c145-access-polymorphic-objects-through-pointers-and-references

   cppcoreguidelines-special-member-functions
       The check finds classes where some but not all of  the  special	member
       functions are defined.

       By default the compiler defines a copy constructor, copy	assignment op-
       erator,	move constructor, move assignment operator and destructor. The
       default can be suppressed by explicit user-definitions.	The  relation-
       ship between which functions will be suppressed by definitions of other
       functions  is complicated and it	is advised that	all five are defaulted
       or explicitly defined.

       Note that defining a function with = delete is considered to be a defi-
       nition.

       This rule is part of the	"Constructors, assignments,  and  destructors"
       profile of the C++ Core Guidelines, corresponding to rule C.21. See

       https://github.com/isocpp/CppCoreGuidelines/blob/master/CppCoreGuidelines.md#c21-if-you-define-or-delete-any-default-operation-define-or-delete-them-all.

   Options
       AllowSoleDefaultDtor
	      When  set	 to  true  (default is false), this check doesn't flag
	      classes with a sole, explicitly defaulted	destructor. An example
	      for such a class is:

		 struct	A {
		   virtual ~A()	= default;
		 };

       AllowMissingMoveFunctions
	      When set to true (default	is false),  this  check	 doesn't  flag
	      classes  which  define no	move operations	at all.	It still flags
	      classes which define only	one of either move constructor or move
	      assignment operator. With	this  option  enabled,	the  following
	      class won't be flagged:

		 struct	A {
		   A(const A&);
		   A& operator=(const A&);
		   ~A();
		 };

       AllowMissingMoveFunctionsWhenCopyIsDeleted
	      When  set	 to  true  (default is false), this check doesn't flag
	      classes which define deleted copy	operations  but	 don't	define
	      move  operations.	This flag is related to	Google C++ Style Guide
	      https://google.github.io/styleguide/cppguide.html#Copyable_Movable_Types.
	      With this	option enabled,	the following class won't be flagged:

		 struct	A {
		   A(const A&) = delete;
		   A& operator=(const A&) = delete;
		   ~A();
		 };

   cppcoreguidelines-virtual-class-destructor
       Finds virtual classes whose destructor is neither  public  and  virtual
       nor  protected  and non-virtual.	A virtual class's destructor should be
       specified in one	of these ways to prevent undefined behavior.

       This check implements C.35 from the CppCoreGuidelines.

       Note that this check will diagnose a class with a  virtual  method  re-
       gardless	of whether the class is	used as	a base class or	not.

       Fixes are available for user-declared and implicit destructors that are
       either  public  and  non-virtual	or protected and virtual. No fixes are
       offered for private destructors.	There, the decision  whether  to  make
       them  private  and  virtual or protected	and non-virtual	depends	on the
       use case	and is thus left to the	user.

   Example
       For example, the	following classes/structs get  flagged	by  the	 check
       since they violate guideline C.35:

	  struct Foo {	      // NOK, protected	destructor should not be virtual
	    virtual void f();
	  protected:
	    virtual ~Foo(){}
	  };

	  class	Bar {	      // NOK, public destructor	should be virtual
	    virtual void f();
	  public:
	    ~Bar(){}
	  };

       This would be rewritten to look like this:

	  struct Foo {	      // OK, destructor	is not virtual anymore
	    virtual void f();
	  protected:
	    ~Foo(){}
	  };

	  class	Bar {	      // OK, destructor	is now virtual
	    virtual void f();
	  public:
	    virtual ~Bar(){}
	  };

   darwin-avoid-spinlock
       Finds  usages of	OSSpinlock, which is deprecated	due to potential live-
       lock problems.

       This check will detect following	function invocations:

        OSSpinlockLock

        OSSpinlockTry

        OSSpinlockUnlock

       The  corresponding  information	about  the  problem   of   OSSpinlock:
       https://blog.postmates.com/why-spinlocks-are-bad-on-ios-b69fc5221058

   darwin-dispatch-once-nonstatic
       Finds  declarations  of	dispatch_once_t	 variables  without  static or
       global storage. The behavior of using dispatch_once_t  predicates  with
       automatic or dynamic storage is undefined by libdispatch, and should be
       avoided.

       It  is a	common pattern to have functions initialize internal static or
       global data once	when the function  runs,  but  programmers  have  been
       known  to  miss the static on the dispatch_once_t predicate, leading to
       an uninitialized	flag value at the mercy	of the stack.

       Programmers have	also been known	to make	dispatch_once_t	 variables  be
       members	of  structs or classes,	with the intent	to lazily perform some
       expensive struct	or class member	 initialization	 only  once;  however,
       this violates the libdispatch requirements.

       See  the	 discussion section of Apple's dispatch_once documentation for
       more information.

   fuchsia-default-arguments-calls
       Warns if	a function or method is	called with default arguments.

       For example, given the declaration:

	  int foo(int value = 5) { return value; }

       A function call expression that uses a default argument will  be	 diag-
       nosed.  Calling it without defaults will	not cause a warning:

	  foo();  // warning
	  foo(0); // no	warning

       See	the	 features      disallowed      in      Fuchsia	    at
       https://fuchsia.googlesource.com/zircon/+/master/docs/cxx.md

   fuchsia-default-arguments-declarations
       Warns if	a function or method is	declared with default parameters.

       For example, the	declaration:

	  int foo(int value = 5) { return value; }

       will cause a warning.

       See	the	 features      disallowed      in      Fuchsia	    at
       https://fuchsia.googlesource.com/zircon/+/master/docs/cxx.md

   fuchsia-header-anon-namespaces
       The  fuchsia-header-anon-namespaces  check  is  an  alias,  please  see
       google-build-namespace for more information.

   fuchsia-multiple-inheritance
       Warns if	a class	inherits from multiple classes that are	not pure  vir-
       tual.

       For  example,  declaring	 a  class that inherits	from multiple concrete
       classes is disallowed:

	  class	Base_A {
	  public:
	    virtual int	foo() {	return 0; }
	  };

	  class	Base_B {
	  public:
	    virtual int	bar() {	return 0; }
	  };

	  // Warning
	  class	Bad_Child1 : public Base_A, Base_B {};

       A class that inherits from a pure virtual is allowed:

	  class	Interface_A {
	  public:
	    virtual int	foo() =	0;
	  };

	  class	Interface_B {
	  public:
	    virtual int	bar() =	0;
	  };

	  // No	warning
	  class	Good_Child1 : public Interface_A, Interface_B {
	    virtual int	foo() override { return	0; }
	    virtual int	bar() override { return	0; }
	  };

       See	the	 features      disallowed      in      Fuchsia	    at
       https://fuchsia.googlesource.com/zircon/+/master/docs/cxx.md

   fuchsia-overloaded-operator
       Warns if	an operator is overloaded, except for the assignment (copy and
       move) operators.

       For example:

	  int operator+(int);	  // Warning

	  B &operator=(const B &Other);	 // No warning
	  B &operator=(B &&Other) // No	warning

       See	the	 features      disallowed      in      Fuchsia	    at
       https://fuchsia.googlesource.com/zircon/+/master/docs/cxx.md

   fuchsia-statically-constructed-objects
       Warns if	global,	non-trivial  objects  with  static  storage  are  con-
       structed,  unless the object is statically initialized with a constexpr
       constructor or has no explicit constructor.

       For example:

	  class	A {};

	  class	B {
	  public:
	    B(int Val) : Val(Val) {}
	  private:
	    int	Val;
	  };

	  class	C {
	  public:
	    C(int Val) : Val(Val) {}
	    constexpr C() : Val(0) {}

	  private:
	    int	Val;
	  };

	  static A a;	      // No warning, as	there is no explicit constructor
	  static C c(0);      // No warning, as	constructor is constexpr

	  static B b(0);      // Warning, as constructor is not	constexpr
	  static C c2(0, 1);  // Warning, as constructor is not	constexpr

	  static int i;	      // No warning, as	it is trivial

	  extern int get_i();
	  static C(get_i())   // Warning, as the constructor is	dynamically initialized

       See	the	 features      disallowed      in      Fuchsia	    at
       https://fuchsia.googlesource.com/zircon/+/master/docs/cxx.md

   fuchsia-trailing-return
       Functions  that	have trailing returns are disallowed, except for those
       using decltype specifiers and lambda with otherwise unutterable	return
       types.

       For example:

	  // No	warning
	  int add_one(const int	arg) { return arg; }

	  // Warning
	  auto get_add_one() ->	int (*)(const int) {
	    return add_one;
	  }

       Exceptions are made for lambdas and decltype specifiers:

	  // No	warning
	  auto lambda =	[](double x, double y) -> double {return x + y;};

	  // No	warning
	  template <typename T1, typename T2>
	  auto fn(const	T1 &lhs, const T2 &rhs)	-> decltype(lhs	+ rhs) {
	    return lhs + rhs;
	  }

       See	the	 features      disallowed      in      Fuchsia	    at
       https://fuchsia.googlesource.com/zircon/+/master/docs/cxx.md

   fuchsia-virtual-inheritance
       Warns if	classes	are defined with virtual inheritance.

       For example, classes should not be defined with virtual inheritance:

	  class	B : public virtual A {};   // warning

       See	the	 features      disallowed      in      Fuchsia	    at
       https://fuchsia.googlesource.com/zircon/+/master/docs/cxx.md

   google-build-explicit-make-pair
       Check that make_pair's template arguments are deduced.

       G++ 4.6 in C++11	mode fails badly if make_pair's	template arguments are
       specified explicitly, and such use isn't	intended in any	case.

       Corresponding cpplint.py	check name: build/explicit_make_pair.

   google-build-namespaces
       cert-dcl59-cpp  redirects  here	as  an	alias  for  this check.	 fuch-
       sia-header-anon-namespaces redirects here as an alias for this check.

       Finds anonymous namespaces in headers.

       https://google.github.io/styleguide/cppguide.html#Namespaces

       Corresponding cpplint.py	check name: build/namespaces.

   Options
       HeaderFileExtensions
	      A	comma-separated	list of	filename extensions  of	 header	 files
	      (the filename extensions should not include "." prefix). Default
	      is  "h,hh,hpp,hxx".   For	header files without an	extension, use
	      an empty string (if there	are no other  desired  extensions)  or
	      leave  an	empty element in the list. E.g., "h,hh,hpp,hxx," (note
	      the trailing comma).

   google-build-using-namespace
       Finds using namespace directives.

       The check implements the	following rule of the Google C++ Style Guide:
	  You may not use a using-directive to make all	names from a namespace
	  available.

	  // Forbidden -- This pollutes	the namespace.
	  using	namespace foo;

       Corresponding cpplint.py	check name: build/namespaces.

   google-default-arguments
       Checks that default arguments are not given for virtual methods.

       See https://google.github.io/styleguide/cppguide.html#Default_Arguments

   google-explicit-constructor
       Checks that constructors	callable with a	single argument	and conversion
       operators are marked explicit to	avoid the risk	of  unintentional  im-
       plicit conversions.

       Consider	this example:

	  struct S {
	    int	x;
	    operator bool() const { return true; }
	  };

	  bool f() {
	    S a{1};
	    S b{2};
	    return a ==	b;
	  }

       The  function  will  return true, since the objects are implicitly con-
       verted to bool before comparison, which is unlikely to be the intent.

       The check will suggest inserting	explicit  before  the  constructor  or
       conversion  operator  declaration.  However, copy and move constructors
       should not be explicit, as well as constructors taking  a  single  ini-
       tializer_list argument.

       This code:

	  struct S {
	    S(int a);
	    explicit S(const S&);
	    operator bool() const;
	    ...

       will become

	  struct S {
	    explicit S(int a);
	    S(const S&);
	    explicit operator bool() const;
	    ...

       See
       https://google.github.io/styleguide/cppguide.html#Explicit_Constructors

   google-global-names-in-headers
       Flag  global  namespace	pollution  in  header files. Right now it only
       triggers	on using declarations and directives.

       The	  relevant	  style	       guide	    section	    is
       https://google.github.io/styleguide/cppguide.html#Namespaces.

   Options
       HeaderFileExtensions
	      A	 comma-separated  list	of filename extensions of header files
	      (the filename extensions should not contain "." prefix). Default
	      is "h".  For header files	without	an  extension,	use  an	 empty
	      string  (if  there  are no other desired extensions) or leave an
	      empty element in	the  list.  E.g.,  "h,hh,hpp,hxx,"  (note  the
	      trailing comma).

   google-objc-avoid-nsobject-new
       Finds  calls  to	 +new  or overrides of it, which are prohibited	by the
       Google Objective-C style	guide.

       The Google Objective-C style guide forbids calling +new	or  overriding
       it in class implementations, preferring +alloc and -init	methods	to in-
       stantiate objects.

       An example:

	  NSDate *now =	[NSDate	new];
	  Foo *bar = [Foo new];

       Instead,	code should use	+alloc/-init or	class factory methods.

	  NSDate *now =	[NSDate	date];
	  Foo *bar = [[Foo alloc] init];

       This  check  corresponds	 to the	Google Objective-C Style Guide rule Do
       Not Use +new.

   google-objc-avoid-throwing-exception
       Finds uses of throwing exceptions usages	in Objective-C files.

       For the same reason as the Google C++ style guide, we prefer not	throw-
       ing exceptions from Objective-C code.

       The	 corresponding	     C++       style	    guide	 rule:
       https://google.github.io/styleguide/cppguide.html#Exceptions

       Instead,	 prefer	passing	in NSError ** and return BOOL to indicate suc-
       cess or failure.

       A counterexample:

	  - (void)readFile {
	    if ([self isError])	{
	      @throw [NSException exceptionWithName:...];
	    }
	  }

       Instead,	returning an error via NSError ** is preferred:

	  - (BOOL)readFileWithError:(NSError **)error {
	    if ([self isError])	{
	      *error = [NSError	errorWithDomain:...];
	      return NO;
	    }
	    return YES;
	  }

       The	    corresponding	   style	  guide		 rule:
       https://google.github.io/styleguide/objcguide.html#avoid-throwing-exceptions

   google-objc-function-naming
       Finds function declarations in Objective-C files	that do	not follow the
       pattern described in the	Google Objective-C Style Guide.

       The    corresponding    style   guide   rule   can   be	 found	 here:
       https://google.github.io/styleguide/objcguide.html#function-names

       All function names should be in Pascal case.  Functions	whose  storage
       class is	not static should have an appropriate prefix.

       The following code sample does not follow this pattern:

	  static bool is_positive(int i) { return i > 0; }
	  bool IsNegative(int i) { return i < 0; }

       The sample above	might be corrected to the following code:

	  static bool IsPositive(int i)	{ return i > 0;	}
	  bool *ABCIsNegative(int i) { return i	< 0; }

   google-objc-global-variable-declaration
       Finds  global  variable	declarations  in Objective-C files that	do not
       follow the pattern of variable  names  in  Google's  Objective-C	 Style
       Guide.

       The	    corresponding	   style	  guide		 rule:
       https://google.github.io/styleguide/objcguide.html#variable-names

       All the global variables	should follow the pattern of  g[A-Z].*	(vari-
       ables)  or k[A-Z].* (constants).	The check will suggest a variable name
       that follows the	pattern	if it can be inferred from the original	name.

       For code:

	  static NSString* myString = @"hello";

       The fix will be:

	  static NSString* gMyString = @"hello";

       Another example of constant:

	  static NSString* const myConstString = @"hello";

       The fix will be:

	  static NSString* const kMyConstString	= @"hello";

       However for code	that prefixed with non-alphabetical characters like:

	  static NSString* __anotherString = @"world";

       The check will give a warning message but will not be able to suggest a
       fix. The	user needs to fix it on	their own.

   google-readability-avoid-underscore-in-googletest-name
       Checks whether there are	underscores in googletest test and  test  case
       names in	test macros:

        TEST

        TEST_F

        TEST_P

        TYPED_TEST

        TYPED_TEST_P

       The FRIEND_TEST macro is	not included.

       For example:

	  TEST(TestCaseName, Illegal_TestName) {}
	  TEST(Illegal_TestCaseName, TestName) {}

       would  trigger the check. Underscores are not allowed in	test names nor
       test case names.

       The DISABLED_ prefix, which may be used to disable individual tests, is
       ignored when checking test names, but the rest of the rest of the  test
       name is still checked.

       This check does not propose any fixes.

   google-readability-braces-around-statements
       The  google-readability-braces-around-statements	 check	is  an	alias,
       please see readability-braces-around-statements for more	information.

   google-readability-casting
       Finds usages of C-style casts.

       https://google.github.io/styleguide/cppguide.html#Casting

       Corresponding cpplint.py	check name: readability/casting.

       This check is similar to	-Wold-style-cast, but  it  suggests  automated
       fixes  in  some	cases.	The reported locations should not be different
       from the	ones generated by -Wold-style-cast.

   google-readability-function-size
       The google-readability-function-size check  is  an  alias,  please  see
       readability-function-size for more information.

   google-readability-namespace-comments
       The google-readability-namespace-comments check is an alias, please see
       llvm-namespace-comment for more information.

   google-readability-todo
       Finds TODO comments without a username or bug number.

       The	   relevant	   style	guide	     section	    is
       https://google.github.io/styleguide/cppguide.html#TODO_Comments.

       Corresponding cpplint.py	check: readability/todo

   google-runtime-int
       Finds uses of short, long and long long and suggest replacing them with
       u?intXX(_t)?.

       The	    corresponding	   style	  guide		 rule:
       https://google.github.io/styleguide/cppguide.html#Integer_Types.

       Corresponding cpplint.py	check: runtime/int.

   Options
       UnsignedTypePrefix
	      A	string specifying the unsigned type prefix. Default is uint.

       SignedTypePrefix
	      A	string specifying the signed type prefix. Default is int.

       TypeSuffix
	      A	string specifying the type suffix. Default is an empty string.

   google-runtime-operator
       Finds overloads of unary	operator &.

       https://google.github.io/styleguide/cppguide.html#Operator_Overloading

       Corresponding cpplint.py	check name: runtime/operator.

   google-upgrade-googletest-case
       Finds  uses  of deprecated Google Test version 1.9 APIs with names con-
       taining case and	replaces them with equivalent APIs with	suite.

       All names containing case are being replaced to be consistent with  the
       meanings	 of  "test case" and "test suite" as used by the International
       Software	Testing	Qualifications Board and ISO 29119.

       The new names are a part	of Google Test version 1.9 (release  pending).
       It is recommended that users update their dependency to version 1.9 and
       then use	this check to remove deprecated	names.

       The affected APIs are:

        Member	  functions   of   testing::Test,   testing::TestInfo,	 test-
	 ing::TestEventListener, testing::UnitTest, and	 any  type  inheriting
	 from these types

        The	 macros	    TYPED_TEST_CASE,	 TYPED_TEST_CASE_P,	REGIS-
	 TER_TYPED_TEST_CASE_P,	and INSTANTIATE_TYPED_TEST_CASE_P

        The type alias	testing::TestCase

       Examples	of fixes created by this check:

	  class	FooTest	: public testing::Test {
	  public:
	    static void	SetUpTestCase();
	    static void	TearDownTestCase();
	  };

	  TYPED_TEST_CASE(BarTest, BarTypes);

       becomes

	  class	FooTest	: public testing::Test {
	  public:
	    static void	SetUpTestSuite();
	    static void	TearDownTestSuite();
	  };

	  TYPED_TEST_SUITE(BarTest, BarTypes);

       For better consistency of user code, the	check renames both virtual and
       non-virtual member functions with matching names	in derived types.  The
       check tries to provide only a warning when a fix	cannot be made safely,
       as is the case with some	template and macro uses.

   hicpp-avoid-c-arrays
       The    hicpp-avoid-c-arrays    check    is   an	 alias,	  please   see
       modernize-avoid-c-arrays	for more information.

   hicpp-avoid-goto
       The hicpp-avoid-goto check is an	alias to cppcoreguidelines-avoid-goto.
       Rule 6.3.1 High Integrity C++ requires that goto	only skips parts of  a
       block and is not	used for other reasons.

       Both  coding  guidelines	 implement  the	same exception to the usage of
       goto.

   hicpp-braces-around-statements
       The  hicpp-braces-around-statements  check  is  an  alias,  please  see
       readability-braces-around-statements for	more information.  It enforces
       the rule	6.1.1.

   hicpp-deprecated-headers
       The   hicpp-deprecated-headers	check	is   an	  alias,   please  see
       modernize-deprecated-headers for	more  information.   It	 enforces  the
       rule 1.3.3.

   hicpp-exception-baseclass
       Ensure  that  every  value that in a throw expression is	an instance of
       std::exception.

       This enforces rule 15.1 of the High Integrity C++ Coding	Standard.

	  class	custom_exception {};

	  void throwing() noexcept(false) {
	    // Problematic throw expressions.
	    throw int(42);
	    throw custom_exception();
	  }

	  class	mathematical_error : public std::exception {};

	  void throwing2() noexcept(false) {
	    // These kind of throws are	ok.
	    throw mathematical_error();
	    throw std::runtime_error();
	    throw std::exception();
	  }

   hicpp-explicit-conversions
       This check is an	alias for google-explicit-constructor.	 Used  to  en-
       force  parts  of	rule 5.4.1.  This check	will enforce that constructors
       and conversion operators	are marked explicit.  Other forms  of  casting
       checks  are  implemented	 in other places.  The following checks	can be
       used to check for more forms of casting:

        cppcoreguidelines-pro-type-static-cast-downcast

        cppcoreguidelines-pro-type-reinterpret-cast

        cppcoreguidelines-pro-type-const-cast

        cppcoreguidelines-pro-type-cstyle-cast

   hicpp-function-size
       This check is an	alias for readability-function-size.   Useful  to  en-
       force multiple sections on function complexity.

        rule 8.2.2

        rule 8.3.1

        rule 8.3.2

   hicpp-invalid-access-moved
       This check is an	alias for bugprone-use-after-move.

       Implements  parts  of the rule 8.4.1 to check if	moved-from objects are
       accessed.

   hicpp-member-init
       This check is an	alias for cppcoreguidelines-pro-type-member-init.  Im-
       plements	the check for rule 12.4.2 to initialize	class members  in  the
       right order.

   hicpp-move-const-arg
       The    hicpp-move-const-arg    check    is   an	 alias,	  please   see
       performance-move-const-arg for more information.	 It enforces the  rule
       17.3.1.

   hicpp-multiway-paths-covered
       This check discovers situations where code paths	are not	fully-covered.
       It  furthermore suggests	using if instead of switch if the code will be
       more clear.  The	rule 6.1.2 and rule 6.1.4 of the  High	Integrity  C++
       Coding Standard are enforced.

       if-else	if  chains  that  miss a final else branch might lead to unex-
       pected program execution	and be the result of a logical error.  If  the
       missing	else branch is intended	you can	leave it empty with a clarify-
       ing comment.  This warning can be noisy on some code bases,  so	it  is
       disabled	by default.

	  void f1() {
	    int	i = determineTheNumber();

	     if(i > 0) {
	       // Some Calculation
	     } else if (i < 0) {
	       // Precondition violated	or something else.
	     }
	     //	...
	  }

       Similar	arguments  hold	 for  switch statements	which do not cover all
       possible	code paths.

	  // The missing default branch	might be a logical error. It can be kept empty
	  // if	there is nothing to do,	making it explicit.
	  void f2(int i) {
	    switch (i) {
	    case 0: // something
	      break;
	    case 1: // something else
	      break;
	    }
	    // All other numbers?
	  }

	  // Violates this rule	as well, but already emits a compiler warning (-Wswitch).
	  enum Color { Red, Green, Blue, Yellow	};
	  void f3(enum Color c)	{
	    switch (c) {
	    case Red: // We can't drive	for now.
	      break;
	    case Green:	 // We are allowed to drive.
	      break;
	    }
	    // Other cases missing
	  }

       The rule	6.1.4 requires every switch statement to  have	at  least  two
       case labels other than a	default	label.	Otherwise, the switch could be
       better  expressed  with an if statement.	 Degenerated switch statements
       without any labels are caught as	well.

	  // Degenerated switch	that could be better written as	`if`
	  int i	= 42;
	  switch(i) {
	    case 1: // do something here
	    default: //	do something else here
	  }

	  // Should rather be the following:
	  if (i	== 1) {
	    // do something here
	  }
	  else {
	    // do something here
	  }

	  // A completely degenerated switch will be diagnosed.
	  int i	= 42;
	  switch(i) {}

   Options
       WarnOnMissingElse
	      Boolean flag that	activates a warning for	missing	else branches.
	      Default is false.

   hicpp-named-parameter
       This check is an	alias for readability-named-parameter.

       Implements rule 8.2.1.

   hicpp-new-delete-operators
       This check is an	alias for misc-new-delete-overloads.  Implements  rule
       12.3.1  to  ensure the new and delete operators have the	correct	signa-
       ture.

   hicpp-no-array-decay
       The   hicpp-no-array-decay   check   is	 an    alias,	 please	   see
       cppcoreguidelines-pro-bounds-array-to-pointer-decay  for	 more informa-
       tion.  It enforces the rule 4.1.1.

   hicpp-no-assembler
       Check for assembler statements. No fix is offered.

       Inline assembler	is forbidden by	the High Integrity C++ Coding Standard
       as it restricts the portability of code.

   hicpp-no-malloc
       The    hicpp-no-malloc	 check	  is	an    alias,	please	   see
       cppcoreguidelines-no-malloc for more information.  It enforces the rule
       5.3.2.

   hicpp-noexcept-move
       This  check  is	an  alias  for	performance-noexcept-move-constructor.
       Checks rule 12.5.4 to mark move assignment and move construction	 noex-
       cept.

   hicpp-signed-bitwise
       Finds  uses  of	bitwise	 operations on signed integer types, which may
       lead to undefined or implementation defined behavior.

       The according rule is defined in	the High Integrity C++ Standard,  Sec-
       tion 5.6.1.

   Options
       IgnorePositiveIntegerLiterals
	      If  this	option is set to true, the check will not warn on bit-
	      wise operations with positive integer literals, e.g. ~0, 2 << 1,
	      etc.  Default value is false.

   hicpp-special-member-functions
       This check is an	alias for  cppcoreguidelines-special-member-functions.
       Checks  that  special  member functions have the	correct	signature, ac-
       cording to rule 12.5.7.

   hicpp-static-assert
       The   hicpp-static-assert   check   is	 an    alias,	 please	   see
       misc-static-assert for more information.	 It enforces the rule 7.1.10.

   hicpp-undelegated-constructor
       This check is an	alias for bugprone-undelegated-constructor.  Partially
       implements  rule	 12.4.5	 to  find misplaced constructor	calls inside a
       constructor.

	  struct Ctor {
	    Ctor();
	    Ctor(int);
	    Ctor(int, int);
	    Ctor(Ctor *i) {
	      // All Ctor() calls result in a temporary	object
	      Ctor(); // did you intend	to call	a delegated constructor?
	      Ctor(0); // did you intend to call a delegated constructor?
	      Ctor(1, 2); // did you intend to call a delegated	constructor?
	      foo();
	    }
	  };

   hicpp-uppercase-literal-suffix
       The  hicpp-uppercase-literal-suffix  check  is  an  alias,  please  see
       readability-uppercase-literal-suffix for	more information.

   hicpp-use-auto
       The hicpp-use-auto check	is an alias, please see	modernize-use-auto for
       more information.  It enforces the rule 7.1.8.

   hicpp-use-emplace
       The    hicpp-use-emplace	   check    is	  an	alias,	  please   see
       modernize-use-emplace for  more	information.   It  enforces  the  rule
       17.4.2.

   hicpp-use-equals-default
       This  check  is	an alias for modernize-use-equals-default.  Implements
       rule 12.5.1 to explicitly default special member	functions.

   hicpp-use-equals-delete
       This check is an	 alias	for  modernize-use-equals-delete.   Implements
       rule 12.5.1 to explicitly default or delete special member functions.

   hicpp-use-noexcept
       The    hicpp-use-noexcept    check    is	   an	 alias,	  please   see
       modernize-use-noexcept for more	information.   It  enforces  the  rule
       1.3.5.

   hicpp-use-nullptr
       The    hicpp-use-nullptr	   check    is	  an	alias,	  please   see
       modernize-use-nullptr for  more	information.   It  enforces  the  rule
       2.5.3.

   hicpp-use-override
       This  check  is	an  alias for modernize-use-override.  Implements rule
       10.2.1 to declare a virtual function override when overriding.

   hicpp-vararg
       The    hicpp-vararg    check    is     an     alias,	please	   see
       cppcoreguidelines-pro-type-vararg  for  more  information.  It enforces
       the rule	14.1.1.

   linuxkernel-must-use-errs
       Checks Linux kernel code	to see if it uses the results from  the	 func-
       tions  in linux/err.h. Also checks to see if code uses the results from
       functions that directly return a	value from one of  these  error	 func-
       tions.

       This is important in the	Linux kernel because ERR_PTR, PTR_ERR, IS_ERR,
       IS_ERR_OR_NULL,	ERR_CAST,  and	PTR_ERR_OR_ZERO	 return	values must be
       checked,	since positive pointers	and negative  error  codes  are	 being
       used  in	 the  same  context.  These  functions	are  marked with __at-
       tribute__((warn_unused_result)),	but some kernel	versions do  not  have
       this warning enabled for	clang.

       Examples:

	  /* Trivial unused call to an ERR function */
	  PTR_ERR_OR_ZERO(some_function_call());

	  /* A function	that returns ERR_PTR. */
	  void *fn() { ERR_PTR(-EINVAL); }

	  /* An	invalid	use of fn. */
	  fn();

   llvm-else-after-return
       The    llvm-else-after-return   check   is   an	 alias,	  please   see
       readability-else-after-return for more information.

   llvm-header-guard
       Finds and fixes header guards that do not adhere	to LLVM	style.

   Options
       HeaderFileExtensions
	      A	comma-separated	list of	filename extensions  of	 header	 files
	      (the filename extensions should not include "." prefix). Default
	      is  "h,hh,hpp,hxx".   For	header files without an	extension, use
	      an empty string (if there	are no other  desired  extensions)  or
	      leave  an	empty element in the list. E.g., "h,hh,hpp,hxx," (note
	      the trailing comma).

   llvm-include-order
       Checks the correct order	of #includes.

       See https://llvm.org/docs/CodingStandards.html#include-style

   llvm-namespace-comment
       google-readability-namespace-comments redirects here as	an  alias  for
       this check.

       Checks that long	namespaces have	a closing comment.

       https://llvm.org/docs/CodingStandards.html#namespace-indentation

       https://google.github.io/styleguide/cppguide.html#Namespaces

	  namespace n1 {
	  void f();
	  }

	  // becomes

	  namespace n1 {
	  void f();
	  }  //	namespace n1

   Options
       ShortNamespaceLines
	      Requires	the  closing  brace  of	the namespace definition to be
	      followed by a closing comment if the body	of the	namespace  has
	      more than	ShortNamespaceLines lines of code. The value is	an un-
	      signed integer that defaults to 1U.

       SpacesBeforeComments
	      An  unsigned  integer specifying the number of spaces before the
	      comment closing a	namespace definition. Default is 1U.

   llvm-prefer-isa-or-dyn-cast-in-conditionals
       Looks at	conditionals and finds and replaces  cases  of	cast<>,	 which
       will assert rather than return a	null pointer, and dyn_cast<> where the
       return  value  is  not captured.	Additionally, finds and	replaces cases
       that match the pattern var  &&  isa<X>(var),  where  var	 is  evaluated
       twice.

	  // Finds these:
	  if (auto x = cast<X>(y)) {}
	  // is	replaced by:
	  if (auto x = dyn_cast<X>(y)) {}

	  if (cast<X>(y)) {}
	  // is	replaced by:
	  if (isa<X>(y)) {}

	  if (dyn_cast<X>(y)) {}
	  // is	replaced by:
	  if (isa<X>(y)) {}

	  if (var && isa<T>(var)) {}
	  // is	replaced by:
	  if (isa_and_nonnull<T>(var.foo())) {}

	  // Other cases are ignored, e.g.:
	  if (auto f = cast<Z>(y)->foo()) {}
	  if (cast<Z>(y)->foo()) {}
	  if (X.cast(y)) {}

   llvm-prefer-register-over-unsigned
       Finds  historical  use  of  unsigned  to	 hold  vregs  and physregs and
       rewrites	them to	use Register.

       Currently this works by finding all variables of	unsigned integer  type
       whose  initializer  begins  with	 an implicit cast from Register	to un-
       signed.

	  void example(MachineOperand &MO) {
	    unsigned Reg = MO.getReg();
	    ...
	  }

       becomes:

	  void example(MachineOperand &MO) {
	    Register Reg = MO.getReg();
	    ...
	  }

   llvm-qualified-auto
       The   llvm-qualified-auto   check   is	 an    alias,	 please	   see
       readability-qualified-auto for more information.

   llvm-twine-local
       Looks  for local	Twine variables	which are prone	to use after frees and
       should be generally avoided.

	  static Twine Moo = Twine("bark") + "bah";

	  // becomes

	  static std::string Moo = (Twine("bark") + "bah").str();

   llvmlibc-callee-namespace
       Checks all calls	resolve	to functions within __llvm_libc	namespace.

	  namespace __llvm_libc	{

	  // Allow calls with the fully	qualified name.
	  __llvm_libc::strlen("hello");

	  // Allow calls to compiler provided functions.
	  (void)__builtin_abs(-1);

	  // Bare calls	are allowed as long as they resolve to the correct namespace.
	  strlen("world");

	  // Disallow calling into functions in	the global namespace.
	  ::strlen("!");

	  } // namespace __llvm_libc

   llvmlibc-implementation-in-namespace
       Checks that all declarations in the llvm-libc implementation are	within
       the correct namespace.

	  // Correct: implementation inside the	correct	namespace.
	  namespace __llvm_libc	{
	      void LLVM_LIBC_ENTRYPOINT(strcpy)(char *dest, const char *src) {}
	      // Namespaces within __llvm_libc namespace are allowed.
	      namespace	inner{
		  int localVar = 0;
	      }
	      // Functions with	C linkage are allowed.
	      extern "C" void str_fuzz(){}
	  }

	  // Incorrect:	implementation not in a	namespace.
	  void LLVM_LIBC_ENTRYPOINT(strcpy)(char *dest,	const char *src) {}

	  // Incorrect:	outer most namespace is	not correct.
	  namespace something_else {
	      void LLVM_LIBC_ENTRYPOINT(strcpy)(char *dest, const char *src) {}
	  }

   llvmlibc-restrict-system-libc-headers
       Finds includes of system	libc headers  not  provided  by	 the  compiler
       within llvm-libc	implementations.

	  #include <stdio.h>		// Not allowed because it is part of system libc.
	  #include <stddef.h>		// Allowed because it is provided by the compiler.
	  #include "internal/stdio.h"	// Allowed because it is NOT part of system libc.

       This  check  is	necessary  because  accidentally including system libc
       headers can lead	to subtle and hard to detect bugs.  For	 example  con-
       sider  a	 system	 libc whose dirent struct has slightly different field
       ordering	than llvm-libc.	 While this will  compile  successfully,  this
       can cause issues	during runtime because they are	ABI incompatible.

   Options
       Includes
	      A	 string	 containing a comma separated glob list	of allowed in-
	      clude filenames. Similar to the -checks glob  list  for  running
	      clang-tidy  itself,  the two wildcard characters are * and -, to
	      include and exclude globs,  respectively.	 The  default  is  -*,
	      which disallows all includes.

	      This  can	be used	to allow known safe includes such as Linux de-
	      velopment	headers. See portability-restrict-system-includes  for
	      more details.

   misc-confusable-identifiers
       Warn  about  confusable identifiers, i.e. identifiers that are visually
       close to	each other, but	use different Unicode characters. This detects
       a potential attack described in CVE-2021-42574.

       Example:

	  int fo; // Initial character is U+0066 (LATIN	SMALL LETTER F).
	  int o; // Initial character is U+1234	(SUPER COOL AWESOME UPPERCASE NOT LATIN	F) not U+0066 (LATIN SMALL LETTER F).

   misc-const-correctness
       This check implements detection of local	variables which	could  be  de-
       clared  as const, but are not. Declaring	variables as const is required
       or recommended by many coding guidelines,  such	as:  CppCoreGuidelines
       ES.25 and AUTOSAR C++14 Rule A7-1-1 (6.7.1 Specifiers).

       Please  note  that this analysis	is type-based only. Variables that are
       not modified but	used to	create a non-const handle  that	 might	escape
       the scope are not diagnosed as potential	const.

	  // Declare a variable, which is not ``const``	...
	  int i	= 42;
	  // but use it	as read-only. This means that `i` can be declared ``const``.
	  int result = i * i;

       The  check  can	analyzes values, pointers and references but not (yet)
       pointees:

	  // Normal values like	built-ins or objects.
	  int potential_const_int = 42;	// 'const int potential_const_int = 42'	suggestion.
	  int copy_of_value = potential_const_int;

	  MyClass could_be_const; // 'const MyClass could_be_const' suggestion;
	  could_be_const.const_qualified_method();

	  // References	can be declared	const as well.
	  int &reference_value = potential_const_int; // 'const	int &reference_value' suggestion.
	  int another_copy = reference_value;

	  // The similar semantics of pointers are not (yet) analyzed.
	  int *pointer_variable	= &potential_const_int;	// Not 'const int *pointer_variable' suggestion.
	  int last_copy	= *pointer_variable;

       The automatic code transformation is only applied to variables that are
       declared	in single declarations.	You may	want to	prepare	your code base
       with readability-isolate-declaration first.

       Note	    that	 there		is	    the		 check
       cppcoreguidelines-avoid-non-const-global-variables   to	enforce	 const
       correctness on all globals.

   Known Limitations
       The check will not analyze templated variables or  variables  that  are
       instantiation  dependent.   Different instantiations can	result in dif-
       ferent const correctness	properties and in general it is	 not  possible
       to  find	all instantiations of a	template. It might be used differently
       in an independent translation unit.

       Pointees	can not	be analyzed for	constness yet. The following  code  is
       shows this limitation.

	  // Declare a variable	that will not be modified.
	  int constant_value = 42;

	  // Declare a pointer to that variable, that does not modify either, but misses 'const'.
	  // Could be 'const int *pointer_to_constant =	&constant_value;'
	  int *pointer_to_constant = &constant_value;

	  // Usage:
	  int result = 520 * 120 * (*pointer_to_constant);

       This limitation affects the capability to add const to methods which is
       not possible, too.

   Options
       AnalyzeValues (default =	1)
	      Enable or	disable	the analysis of	ordinary value variables, like
	      int i = 42;

       AnalyzeReferences (default = 1)
	      Enable  or disable the analysis of reference variables, like int
	      &ref = i;

       WarnPointersAsValues (default = 0)
	      This option enables the suggestion for const of the pointer  it-
	      self.   Pointer  values  have two	possibilities to be const, the
	      pointer and the value pointing to.

		 const int value = 42;
		 const int * const pointer_variable = &value;

		 // The	following operations are forbidden for `pointer_variable`.
		 // *pointer_variable =	44;
		 // pointer_variable = nullptr;

       TransformValues (default	= 1)
	      Provides fixit-hints for value  types  that  automatically  adds
	      const if its a single declaration.

		 // Emits a hint for 'value' to	become 'const int value	= 42;'.
		 int value = 42;
		 // Result is modified later in	its life-time. No diagnostic and fixit hint will be emitted.
		 int result = value * 3;
		 result	-= 10;

       TransformReferences (default = 1)
	      Provides fixit-hints for reference types that automatically adds
	      const if its a single declaration.

		 // This variable could	still be a constant. But because there is a non-const reference	to
		 // it,	it can not be transformed (yet).
		 int value = 42;
		 // The	reference 'ref_value' is not modified and can be made 'const int &ref_value = value;'
		 int &ref_value	= value;

		 // Result is modified later in	its life-time. No diagnostic and fixit hint will be emitted.
		 int result = ref_value	* 3;
		 result	-= 10;

       TransformPointersAsValues (default = 0)
	      Provides	fixit-hints  for  pointers  if	their  pointee	is not
	      changed. This does not analyze if	the  value-pointed-to  is  un-
	      changed!

	      Requires 'WarnPointersAsValues' to be 1.

		 int value = 42;
		 // Emits a hint that 'ptr_value' may become 'int *const ptr_value = &value' because its pointee
		 // is not changed.
		 int *ptr_value	= &value;

		 int result = 100 * (*ptr_value);
		 // This modification of the pointee is	still allowed and not analyzed/diagnosed.
		 *ptr_value = 0;

		 // The	following pointer may not become a 'int	*const'.
		 int *changing_pointee = &value;
		 changing_pointee = &result;

   misc-definitions-in-headers
       Finds non-extern	non-inline function and	variable definitions in	header
       files, which can	lead to	potential ODR violations in case these headers
       are included from multiple translation units.

	  // Foo.h
	  int a	= 1; //	Warning: variable definition.
	  extern int d;	// OK: extern variable.

	  namespace N {
	    int	e = 2; // Warning: variable definition.
	  }

	  // Warning: variable definition.
	  const	char* str = "foo";

	  // OK: internal linkage variable definitions are ignored for now.
	  // Although these might also cause ODR violations, we	can be less certain and
	  // should try	to keep	the false-positive rate	down.
	  static int b = 1;
	  const	int c =	1;
	  const	char* const str2 = "foo";
	  constexpr int	k = 1;

	  // Warning: function definition.
	  int g() {
	    return 1;
	  }

	  // OK: inline	function definition is allowed to be defined multiple times.
	  inline int e() {
	    return 1;
	  }

	  class	A {
	  public:
	    int	f1() { return 1; } // OK: implicitly inline member function definition is allowed.
	    int	f2();

	    static int d;
	  };

	  // Warning: not an inline member function definition.
	  int A::f2() {	return 1; }

	  // OK: class static data member declaration is allowed.
	  int A::d = 1;

	  // OK: function template is allowed.
	  template<typename T>
	  T f3() {
	    T a	= 1;
	    return a;
	  }

	  // Warning: full specialization of a function	template is not	allowed.
	  template <>
	  int f3() {
	    int	a = 1;
	    return a;
	  }

	  template <typename T>
	  struct B {
	    void f1();
	  };

	  // OK: member	function definition of a class template	is allowed.
	  template <typename T>
	  void B<T>::f1() {}

	  class	CE {
	    constexpr static int i = 5;	// OK: inline variable definition.
	  };

	  inline int i = 5; // OK: inline variable definition.

	  constexpr int	f10() {	return 0; } // OK: constexpr function implies inline.

	  // OK: C++14 variable	templates are inline.
	  template <class T>
	  constexpr T pi = T(3.1415926L);

   Options
       HeaderFileExtensions
	      A	 comma-separated  list	of filename extensions of header files
	      (the filename extensions should not include "." prefix). Default
	      is "h,hh,hpp,hxx".  For header files without an  extension,  use
	      an  empty	 string	 (if there are no other	desired	extensions) or
	      leave an empty element in	the list. E.g.,	"h,hh,hpp,hxx,"	 (note
	      the trailing comma).

       UseHeaderFileExtension
	      When  true, the check will use the file extension	to distinguish
	      header files. Default is true.

   misc-misleading-bidirectional
       Warn about unterminated bidirectional unicode sequence,	detecting  po-
       tential attack as described in the Trojan Source	attack.

       Example:

	  #include <iostream>

	  int main() {
	      bool isAdmin = false;
	      /* } if (isAdmin)	 begin admins only */
		  std::cout << "You are	an admin.\n";
	      /* end admins only  { */
	      return 0;
	  }

   misc-misleading-identifier
       Finds  identifiers  that	 contain Unicode characters with right-to-left
       direction, which	can be confusing as they may change the	 understanding
       of a whole statement line, as described in Trojan Source.

       An example of such misleading code follows:

	  #include <stdio.h>

	  short	int  = (short int)0;
	  short	int  = (short int)12345;

	  int main() {
	    int	 = ; //	a local	variable, set to zero?
	    printf(" is	%d\n", );
	    printf(" is	%d\n", );
	  }

   misc-misplaced-const
       This  check  diagnoses  when a const qualifier is applied to a typedef/
       using to	a pointer type rather than to the pointee, because  such  con-
       structs are often misleading to developers because the const applies to
       the pointer rather than the pointee.

       For  instance, in the following code, the resulting type	is int * const
       rather than const int *:

	  typedef int *int_ptr;
	  void f(const int_ptr ptr) {
	    *ptr = 0; // potentially quite unexpectedly	the int	can be modified	here
	    ptr	= 0; //	does not compile
	  }

       The check does not diagnose when	the underlying typedef/using type is a
       pointer to a const type or a function pointer type. This	is because the
       const qualifier is less likely to be mistaken because it	would  be  re-
       dundant (or disallowed) on the underlying pointee type.

   misc-new-delete-overloads
       cert-dcl54-cpp redirects	here as	an alias for this check.

       The  check  flags overloaded operator new() and operator	delete() func-
       tions that do not have a	 corresponding	free  store  function  defined
       within  the  same scope.	 For instance, the check will flag a class im-
       plementation of a non-placement operator	new() when the class does  not
       also define a non-placement operator delete() function as well.

       The  check  does	not flag implicitly-defined operators, deleted or pri-
       vate operators, or placement operators.

       This check corresponds to CERT  C++  Coding  Standard  rule  DCL54-CPP.
       Overload	 allocation  and  deallocation functions as a pair in the same
       scope.

   misc-no-recursion
       Finds strongly connected	functions (by analyzing	 the  call  graph  for
       SCC's  (Strongly	 Connected Components) that are	loops),	diagnoses each
       function	in the cycle, and displays one	example	 of  a	possible  call
       graph loop (recursion).

       References:

        CERT C++ Coding Standard rule DCL56-CPP. Avoid	cycles during initial-
	 ization of static objects.

        JPL Institutional Coding Standard for the C Programming Language (JPL
	 DOCID D-60411)	rule 2.4 Do not	use direct or indirect recursion.

        OpenCL	Specification, Version 1.2 rule	6.9 Restrictions: i. Recursion
	 is not	supported..

       Limitations:

        The check does	not handle calls done through function pointers

        The check does	not handle C++ destructors

   misc-non-copyable-objects
       cert-fio38-c redirects here as an alias for this	check.

       The  check  flags  dereferences and non-pointer declarations of objects
       that are	not meant to be	passed by value, such as  C  FILE  objects  or
       POSIX pthread_mutex_t objects.

       This check corresponds to CERT C++ Coding Standard rule FIO38-C.	Do not
       copy a FILE object.

   misc-non-private-member-variables-in-classes
       cppcoreguidelines-non-private-member-variables-in-classes     redirects
       here as an alias	for this check.

       Finds classes that contain  non-static  data  members  in  addition  to
       user-declared non-static	member functions and diagnose all data members
       declared	with a non-public access specifier. The	data members should be
       declared	 as  private  and accessed through member functions instead of
       exposed to derived classes or class consumers.

   Options
       IgnoreClassesWithAllMemberVariablesBeingPublic
	      Allows to	completely ignore classes if all the member  variables
	      in that class a declared with a public access specifier.

       IgnorePublicMemberVariables
	      Allows  to  ignore  (not	diagnose) all the member variables de-
	      clared with a public access specifier.

   misc-redundant-expression
       Detect  redundant  expressions  which  are  typically  errors  due   to
       copy-paste.

       Depending on the	operator expressions may be

        redundant,

        always	true,

        always	false,

        always	a constant (zero or one).

       Examples:

	  ((x+1) | (x+1))	      // (x+1) is redundant
	  (p->x	== p->x)	      // always	true
	  (p->x	< p->x)		      // always	false
	  (speed - speed + 1 ==	12)   // speed - speed is always zero

   misc-static-assert
       cert-dcl03-c redirects here as an alias for this	check.

       Replaces	assert() with static_assert() if the condition is evaluable at
       compile time.

       The  condition of static_assert() is evaluated at compile time which is
       safer and more efficient.

   misc-throw-by-value-catch-by-reference
       cert-err09-cpp  redirects  here	 as   an   alias   for	 this	check.
       cert-err61-cpp redirects	here as	an alias for this check.

       Finds  violations of the	rule "Throw by value, catch by reference" pre-
       sented for example in "C++  Coding  Standards"  by  H.  Sutter  and  A.
       Alexandrescu,  as  well as the CERT C++ Coding Standard rule ERR61-CPP.
       Catch exceptions	by lvalue reference.

       Exceptions:

	      	Throwing string	literals will not be flagged despite  being  a
		pointer.  They are not susceptible to slicing and the usage of
		string literals	is idiomatic.

	      	Catching character pointers (char, wchar_t, unicode  character
		types) will not	be flagged to allow catching sting literals.

	      	Moved  named  values  will  not	 be flagged as not throwing an
		anonymous temporary. In	this case we can be sure that the user
		knows that the object can't be accessed	outside	 catch	blocks
		handling the error.

	      	Throwing function parameters will not be flagged as not	throw-
		ing  an	 anonymous temporary. This allows helper functions for
		throwing.

	      	Re-throwing caught exception variables will not	be flagged  as
		not throwing an	anonymous temporary. Although this can usually
		be done	by just	writing	throw; it happens often	enough in real
		code.

   Options
       CheckThrowTemporaries
	      Triggers	detection  of  violations  of  the CERT	recommendation
	      ERR09-CPP. Throw anonymous temporaries.  Default is true.

       WarnOnLargeObject
	      Also warns for any large,	trivial	object caught by value.	Catch-
	      ing a large object by value is not  dangerous  but  affects  the
	      performance negatively. The maximum size of an object allowed to
	      be  caught  without warning can be set using the MaxSize option.
	      Default is false.

       MaxSize
	      Determines the maximum size of an	object allowed	to  be	caught
	      without  warning.	Only applicable	if WarnOnLargeObject is	set to
	      true. If the option is set  by  the  user	 to  std::numeric_lim-
	      its<uint64_t>::max()  then it reverts to the default value.  De-
	      fault is the size	of size_t.

   misc-unconventional-assign-operator
       Finds declarations of assign operators with the wrong return and/or ar-
       gument types and	definitions with good return  type  but	 wrong	return
       statements.

	   The	return type must be Class&.

	   The	 assignment  may be from the class type	by value, const	lvalue
	    reference, non-const rvalue	reference, or from a  completely  dif-
	    ferent type	(e.g. int).

	   Private and	deleted	operators are ignored.

	   The	operator must always return *this.

   misc-uniqueptr-reset-release
       Find and	replace	unique_ptr::reset(release()) with std::move().

       Example:

	  std::unique_ptr<Foo> x, y;
	  x.reset(y.release());	-> x = std::move(y);

       If  y  is already rvalue, std::move() is	not added. x and y can also be
       std::unique_ptr<Foo>*.

   Options
       IncludeStyle
	      A	string specifying which	include-style is used, llvm or google.
	      Default is llvm.

   misc-unused-alias-decls
       Finds unused namespace alias declarations.

	  namespace my_namespace {
	  class	C {};
	  }
	  namespace unused_alias = ::my_namespace;

   misc-unused-parameters
       Finds unused function parameters. Unused	parameters may signify	a  bug
       in the code (e.g. when a	different parameter is used instead). The sug-
       gested  fixes either comment parameter name out or remove the parameter
       completely, if all callers of the function are in the same  translation
       unit and	can be updated.

       The  check is similar to	the -Wunused-parameter compiler	diagnostic and
       can be used to prepare a	codebase to enabling of	 that  diagnostic.  By
       default the check is more permissive (see StrictMode).

	  void a(int i)	{ /*some code that doesn't use `i`*/ }

	  // becomes

	  void a(int  /*i*/) { /*some code that	doesn't	use `i`*/ }

	  static void staticFunctionA(int i);
	  static void staticFunctionA(int i) { /*some code that	doesn't	use `i`*/ }

	  // becomes

	  static void staticFunctionA()
	  static void staticFunctionA()	{ /*some code that doesn't use `i`*/ }

   Options
       StrictMode
	      When  false (default value), the check will ignore trivially un-
	      used parameters, i.e. when the  corresponding  function  has  an
	      empty  body  (and	 in case of constructors - no constructor ini-
	      tializers). When the function body is empty, an unused parameter
	      is unlikely to be	unnoticed by a human reader, and there's basi-
	      cally no place for a bug to hide.

   misc-unused-using-decls
       Finds unused using declarations.

       Example:

	  namespace n {	class C; }
	  using	n::C;  // Never	actually used.

   modernize-avoid-bind
       The check finds uses of std::bind and  boost::bind  and	replaces  them
       with  lambdas.  Lambdas will use	value-capture unless reference capture
       is explicitly requested with std::ref or	boost::ref.

       It supports arbitrary callables including  member  functions,  function
       objects,	 and free functions, and all variations	thereof. Anything that
       you can pass to the first argument of bind should be diagnosable.  Cur-
       rently,	the  only known	case where a fix-it is unsupported is when the
       same placeholder	is specified multiple times in the parameter list.

       Given:

	  int add(int x, int y)	{ return x + y;	}

       Then:

	  void f() {
	    int	x = 2;
	    auto clj = std::bind(add, x, _1);
	  }

       is replaced by:

	  void f() {
	    int	x = 2;
	    auto clj = [=](auto	&& arg1) { return add(x, arg1);	};
	  }

       std::bind can be	hard to	read and can result in larger object files and
       binaries	due to type information	that will not be produced  by  equiva-
       lent lambdas.

   Options
       PermissiveParameterList
	      If the option is set to true, the	check will append auto&&... to
	      the end of every placeholder parameter list. Without this, it is
	      possible	for a fix-it to	perform	an incorrect transformation in
	      the case where the result	of the bind is used in the context  of
	      a	 type  erased  functor such as std::function which allows mis-
	      matched arguments. For example:

	  int add(int x, int y)	{ return x + y;	}
	  int foo() {
	    std::function<int(int,int)>	ignore_args = std::bind(add, 2,	2);
	    return ignore_args(3, 3);
	  }

       is valid	code, and returns 4. The actual	values passed  to  ignore_args
       are  simply  ignored.  Without  PermissiveParameterList,	 this would be
       transformed into

	  int add(int x, int y)	{ return x + y;	}
	  int foo() {
	    std::function<int(int,int)>	ignore_args = [] { return add(2, 2); }
	    return ignore_args(3, 3);
	  }

       which will not compile, since the lambda	does not contain an operator()
       that accepts 2 arguments. With permissive parameter  list,  it  instead
       generates

	  int add(int x, int y)	{ return x + y;	}
	  int foo() {
	    std::function<int(int,int)>	ignore_args = [](auto&&...) { return add(2, 2);	}
	    return ignore_args(3, 3);
	  }

       which is	correct.

       This check requires using C++14 or higher to run.

   modernize-avoid-c-arrays
       cppcoreguidelines-avoid-c-arrays	 redirects  here  as an	alias for this
       check.

       hicpp-avoid-c-arrays redirects here as an alias for this	check.

       Finds C-style array types and recommend to use std::array<> / std::vec-
       tor<>. All types	of C arrays are	diagnosed.

       However,	fix-it are potentially	dangerous  in  header  files  and  are
       therefore not emitted right now.

	  int a[] = {1,	2}; // warning:	do not declare C-style arrays, use std::array<>	instead

	  int b[1]; // warning:	do not declare C-style arrays, use std::array<>	instead

	  void foo() {
	    int	c[b[0]]; // warning: do	not declare C VLA arrays, use std::vector<> instead
	  }

	  template <typename T,	int Size>
	  class	array {
	    T d[Size]; // warning: do not declare C-style arrays, use std::array<> instead

	    int	e[1]; // warning: do not declare C-style arrays, use std::array<> instead
	  };

	  array<int[4],	2> d; // warning: do not declare C-style arrays, use std::array<> instead

	  using	k = int[4]; // warning:	do not declare C-style arrays, use std::array<>	instead

       However,	 the  extern  "C" code is ignored, since it is common to share
       such headers between C code, and	C++ code.

	  // Some header
	  extern "C" {

	  int f[] = {1,	2}; // not diagnosed

	  int j[1]; // not diagnosed

	  inline void bar() {
	    {
	      int j[j[0]]; // not diagnosed
	    }
	  }

	  }

       Similarly, the main() function is ignored. Its second and third parame-
       ters can	be either char*	argv[] or char** argv, but cannot be  std::ar-
       ray<>.

   modernize-concat-nested-namespaces
       Checks for use of nested	namespaces such	as namespace a { namespace b {
       ...  } }	and suggests changing to the more concise syntax introduced in
       C++17: namespace	a::b { ... }.  Inline namespaces are not modified.

       For example:

	  namespace n1 {
	  namespace n2 {
	  void t();
	  }
	  }

	  namespace n3 {
	  namespace n4 {
	  namespace n5 {
	  void t();
	  }
	  }
	  namespace n6 {
	  namespace n7 {
	  void t();
	  }
	  }
	  }

       Will be modified	to:

	  namespace n1::n2 {
	  void t();
	  }

	  namespace n3 {
	  namespace n4::n5 {
	  void t();
	  }
	  namespace n6::n7 {
	  void t();
	  }
	  }

   modernize-deprecated-headers
       Some headers from C library were	deprecated in C++ and  are  no	longer
       welcome	in C++ codebases. Some have no effect in C++. For more details
       refer to	the C++	14 Standard [depr.c.headers] section.

       This check replaces C standard library headers with their C++  alterna-
       tives and removes redundant ones.

	  // C++ source	file...
	  #include <assert.h>
	  #include <stdbool.h>

	  // becomes

	  #include <cassert>
	  // No	'stdbool.h' here.

       Important note: the Standard doesn't guarantee that the C++ headers de-
       clare  all the same functions in	the global namespace. The check	in its
       current form can	break the code that  uses  library  symbols  from  the
       global namespace.

        <assert.h>

        <complex.h>

        <ctype.h>

        <errno.h>

        <fenv.h>     // deprecated since C++11

        <float.h>

        <inttypes.h>

        <limits.h>

        <locale.h>

        <math.h>

        <setjmp.h>

        <signal.h>

        <stdarg.h>

        <stddef.h>

        <stdint.h>

        <stdio.h>

        <stdlib.h>

        <string.h>

        <tgmath.h>   // deprecated since C++11

        <time.h>

        <uchar.h>    // deprecated since C++11

        <wchar.h>

        <wctype.h>

       If  the	specified standard is older than C++11 the check will only re-
       place headers deprecated	before C++11, otherwise	-- every  header  that
       appeared	in the previous	list.

       These headers don't have	effect in C++:

        <iso646.h>

        <stdalign.h>

        <stdbool.h>

       The  checker  ignores  include  directives  within  extern  "C" { ... }
       blocks, since a library might want to expose some API for C and C++ li-
       braries.

	  // C++ source	file...
	  extern "C" {
	  #include <assert.h>  // Left intact.
	  #include <stdbool.h> // Left intact.
	  }

   Options
       CheckHeaderFile
	      clang-tidy cannot	know if	the header file	included by  the  cur-
	      rently  analyzed	C++ source file	is not included	by any other C
	      source  files.   Hence,  to  omit	 false-positives   and	 wrong
	      fixit-hints,  we	ignore emitting	reports	into header files. One
	      can set this option to true if they know that the	 header	 files
	      in  the  project	are  only used by C++ source file.  Default is
	      false.

   modernize-deprecated-ios-base-aliases
       Detects usage of	the deprecated member types of std::ios_base  and  re-
       places those that have a	non-deprecated equivalent.
	       +--------------------------+-------------------------+
	       | Deprecated member type	  | Replacement		    |
	       +--------------------------+-------------------------+
	       | std::ios_base::io_state  | std::ios_base::iostate  |
	       +--------------------------+-------------------------+
	       | std::ios_base::open_mode | std::ios_base::openmode |
	       +--------------------------+-------------------------+
	       | std::ios_base::seek_dir  | std::ios_base::seekdir  |
	       +--------------------------+-------------------------+
	       | std::ios_base::streamoff |			    |
	       +--------------------------+-------------------------+
	       | std::ios_base::streampos |			    |
	       +--------------------------+-------------------------+

   modernize-loop-convert
       This check converts for(...; ...; ...) loops to use the new range-based
       loops in	C++11.

       Three kinds of loops can	be converted:

        Loops over statically allocated arrays.

        Loops over containers,	using iterators.

        Loops over array-like containers, using operator[] and	at().

   MinConfidence option
   risky
       In  loops  where	 the  container	expression is more complex than	just a
       reference to a declared expression (a variable, function, enum,	etc.),
       and  some part of it appears elsewhere in the loop, we lower our	confi-
       dence in	the transformation due to the increased	risk of	 changing  se-
       mantics.	 Transformations for these loops are marked as risky, and thus
       will  only be converted if the minimum required confidence level	is set
       to risky.

	  int arr[10][20];
	  int l	= 5;

	  for (int j = 0; j < 20; ++j)
	    int	k = arr[l][j] +	l; // using l outside arr[l] is	considered risky

	  for (int i = 0; i < obj.getVector().size(); ++i)
	    obj.foo(10); // using 'obj'	is considered risky

       See Range-based loops evaluate end() only once for an example of	an in-
       correct transformation when the minimum required	 confidence  level  is
       set to risky.

   reasonable (Default)
       If a loop calls .end() or .size() after each iteration, the transforma-
       tion  for that loop is marked as	reasonable, and	thus will be converted
       if the required confidence level	is  set	 to  reasonable	 (default)  or
       lower.

	  // using size() is considered	reasonable
	  for (int i = 0; i < container.size();	++i)
	    cout << container[i];

   safe
       Any  other  loops  that do not match the	above criteria to be marked as
       risky or	reasonable are marked safe, and	thus will be converted if  the
       required	confidence level is set	to safe	or lower.

	  int arr[] = {1,2,3};

	  for (int i = 0; i < 3; ++i)
	    cout << arr[i];

   Example
       Original:

	  const	int N =	5;
	  int arr[] = {1,2,3,4,5};
	  vector<int> v;
	  v.push_back(1);
	  v.push_back(2);
	  v.push_back(3);

	  // safe conversion
	  for (int i = 0; i < N; ++i)
	    cout << arr[i];

	  // reasonable	conversion
	  for (vector<int>::iterator it	= v.begin(); it	!= v.end(); ++it)
	    cout << *it;

	  // reasonable	conversion
	  for (int i = 0; i < v.size();	++i)
	    cout << v[i];

       After  applying	the check with minimum confidence level	set to reason-
       able (default):

	  const	int N =	5;
	  int arr[] = {1,2,3,4,5};
	  vector<int> v;
	  v.push_back(1);
	  v.push_back(2);
	  v.push_back(3);

	  // safe conversion
	  for (auto & elem : arr)
	    cout << elem;

	  // reasonable	conversion
	  for (auto & elem : v)
	    cout << elem;

	  // reasonable	conversion
	  for (auto & elem : v)
	    cout << elem;

   Reverse Iterator Support
       The converter is	also capable of	transforming iterator loops which  use
       rbegin  and rend	for looping backwards over a container.	Out of the box
       this will automatically happen in C++20 mode using the ranges  library,
       however the check can be	configured to work without C++20 by specifying
       a function to reverse a range and optionally the	header file where that
       function	lives.

       UseCxx20ReverseRanges
	      When set to true convert loops when in C++20 or later mode using
	      std::ranges::reverse_view.  Default value	is true.

       MakeReverseRangeFunction
	      Specify the function used	to reverse an iterator pair, the func-
	      tion  should accept a class with rbegin and rend methods and re-
	      turn a class with	begin and end methods that call	the rbegin and
	      rend  methods  respectively.  Common  examples  are  ranges::re-
	      verse_view and llvm::reverse.  Default value is an empty string.

       MakeReverseRangeHeader
	      Specifies	 the header file where MakeReverseRangeFunction	is de-
	      clared. For the previous examples	this option would  be  set  to
	      range/v3/view/reverse.hpp	and llvm/ADT/STLExtras.h respectively.
	      If  this is an empty string and MakeReverseRangeFunction is set,
	      the check	will proceed on	the assumption that  the  function  is
	      already  available in the	translation unit.  This	can be wrapped
	      in angle brackets	to signify to add the include as a system  in-
	      clude.  Default value is an empty	string.

       IncludeStyle
	      A	string specifying which	include-style is used, llvm or google.
	      Default is llvm.

   Limitations
       There  are  certain  situations	where the tool may erroneously perform
       transformations that remove information and change semantics. Users  of
       the  tool  should be aware of the behavior and limitations of the check
       outlined	by the cases below.

   Comments inside loop	headers
       Comments	inside the original loop header	are ignored and	 deleted  when
       transformed.

	  for (int i = 0; i < N; /* This will be deleted */ ++i) { }

   Range-based loops evaluate end() only once
       The  C++11  range-based for loop	calls .end() only once during the ini-
       tialization of the loop.	If in the original loop	.end() is called after
       each iteration the semantics of the transformed loop may	differ.

	  // The following is semantically equivalent to the C++11 range-based for loop,
	  // therefore the semantics of	the header will	not change.
	  for (iterator	it = container.begin(),	e = container.end(); it	!= e; ++it) { }

	  // Instead of	calling	.end() after each iteration, this loop will be
	  // transformed to call .end()	only once during the initialization of the loop,
	  // which may affect semantics.
	  for (iterator	it = container.begin();	it != container.end(); ++it) { }

       As explained above, calling member functions of the  container  in  the
       body  of	 the  loop  is considered risky. If the	called member function
       modifies	the container the semantics of the converted loop will	differ
       due to .end() being called only once.

	  bool flag = false;
	  for (vector<T>::iterator it =	vec.begin(); it	!= vec.end(); ++it) {
	    // Add a copy of the first element to the end of the vector.
	    if (!flag) {
	      // This line makes this transformation 'risky'.
	      vec.push_back(*it);
	      flag = true;
	    }
	    cout << *it;
	  }

       The  original  code  above prints out the contents of the container in-
       cluding the newly added element while the converted loop, shown	below,
       will only print the original contents and not the newly added element.

	  bool flag = false;
	  for (auto & elem : vec) {
	    // Add a copy of the first element to the end of the vector.
	    if (!flag) {
	      // This line makes this transformation 'risky'
	      vec.push_back(elem);
	      flag = true;
	    }
	    cout << elem;
	  }

       Semantics  will	also be	affected if .end() has side effects. For exam-
       ple, in the case	where calls to .end() are logged  the  semantics  will
       change  in  the	transformed loop if .end() was originally called after
       each iteration.

	  iterator end() {
	    num_of_end_calls++;
	    return container.end();
	  }

   Overloaded operator->() with	side effects
       Similarly, if operator->() was overloaded to have side effects, such as
       logging,	the semantics will change. If the iterator's operator->()  was
       used  in	 the  original	loop  it will be replaced with <container ele-
       ment>.<member> instead due to the implicit dereference as part  of  the
       range-based  for	loop.  Therefore any side effect of the	overloaded op-
       erator->() will no longer be performed.

	  for (iterator	it = c.begin();	it != c.end(); ++it) {
	    it->func();	// Using operator->()
	  }
	  // Will be transformed to:
	  for (auto & elem : c)	{
	    elem.func(); // No longer using operator->()
	  }

   Pointers and	references to containers
       While most of the check's risk analysis	is  dedicated  to  determining
       whether	the  iterator or container was modified	within the loop, it is
       possible	to circumvent the analysis by accessing	and modifying the con-
       tainer through a	pointer	or reference.

       If the container	were directly used instead of  using  the  pointer  or
       reference  the following	transformation would have only been applied at
       the risky level since calling a member function	of  the	 container  is
       considered  risky.   The	 check	cannot identify	expressions associated
       with the	container that are different than the one  used	 in  the  loop
       header,	therefore  the transformation below ends up being performed at
       the safe	level.

	  vector<int> vec;

	  vector<int> *ptr = &vec;
	  vector<int> &ref = vec;

	  for (vector<int>::iterator it	= vec.begin(), e = vec.end(); it != e; ++it) {
	    if (!flag) {
	      // Accessing and modifying the container is considered risky, but	the risk
	      // level is not raised here.
	      ptr->push_back(*it);
	      ref.push_back(*it);
	      flag = true;
	    }
	  }

   OpenMP
       As range-based for loops	are only available since OpenMP	5, this	 check
       should  not  be used on code with a compatibility requirement of	OpenMP
       prior to	version	5. It is intentional that this check does not make any
       attempts	to exclude incorrect diagnostics on OpenMP for loops prior  to
       OpenMP 5.

       To prevent this check to	be applied (and	to break) OpenMP for loops but
       still  be  applied  to  non-OpenMP  for	loops the usage	of NOLINT (see
       Suppressing Undesired Diagnostics) on the specific for loops is	recom-
       mended.

   modernize-macro-to-enum
       Replaces	 groups	 of  adjacent  macros with an unscoped anonymous enum.
       Using an	unscoped anonymous enum	ensures	that everywhere	the macro  to-
       ken was used previously,	the enumerator name may	be safely used.

       This check can be used to enforce the C++ core guideline	Enum.1:	Prefer
       enumerations over macros, within	the constraints	outlined below.

       Potential macros	for replacement	must meet the following	constraints:

        Macros	 must expand only to integral literal tokens or	expressions of
	 literal tokens.  The expression may contain any of the	 unary	opera-
	 tors  -,  +, ~	or !, any of the binary	operators ,, -,	+, *, /, %, &,
	 |, ^, <, >, <=, >=, ==, !=, ||, &&, <<, >> or <=>, the	ternary	opera-
	 tor ?:	and its	GNU extension.	 Parenthesized	expressions  are  also
	 recognized.   This recognizes most valid expressions.	In particular,
	 expressions with the sizeof operator are not recognized.

        Macros	must be	defined	on sequential source file lines, or with  only
	 comment lines in between macro	definitions.

        Macros	must all be defined in the same	source file.

        Macros	 must  not  be defined within a	conditional compilation	block.
	 (Conditional include guards are exempt	from this constraint.)

        Macros	must not be defined adjacent to	other preprocessor directives.

        Macros	must not be used in any	conditional preprocessing directive.

        Macros	must not be used as arguments to other macros.

        Macros	must not be undefined.

        Macros	must be	defined	at the top-level, not inside  any  declaration
	 or definition.

       Each  cluster of	macros meeting the above constraints is	presumed to be
       a set of	values suitable	for replacement	by an  anonymous  enum.	  From
       there,  a  developer  can  give	the anonymous enum a name and continue
       refactoring to a	scoped enum if desired.	 Comments on the same line  as
       a  macro	 definition  or	 between subsequent macro definitions are pre-
       served in the output.  No formatting is assumed	in  the	 provided  re-
       placements, although clang-tidy can optionally format all fixes.

       WARNING:
	  Initializing expressions are assumed to be valid initializers	for an
	  enum.	 C requires that enum values fit into an int, but this may not
	  be  the case for some	accepted constant expressions.	For instance 1
	  << 40	will not fit into an int when the size of an int is 32 bits.

       Examples:

	  #define RED	0xFF0000
	  #define GREEN	0x00FF00
	  #define BLUE	0x0000FF

	  #define TM_NONE (-1) // No method selected.
	  #define TM_ONE 1    // Use tailored method one.
	  #define TM_TWO 2    // Use tailored method two.  Method two
			      // is preferable to method one.
	  #define TM_THREE 3  // Use tailored method three.

       becomes

	  enum {
	  RED =	0xFF0000,
	  GREEN	= 0x00FF00,
	  BLUE = 0x0000FF
	  };

	  enum {
	  TM_NONE = (-1), // No	method selected.
	  TM_ONE = 1,	 // Use	tailored method	one.
	  TM_TWO = 2,	 // Use	tailored method	two.  Method two
			      // is preferable to method one.
	  TM_THREE = 3	// Use tailored	method three.
	  };

   modernize-make-shared
       This check finds	the creation of	std::shared_ptr	objects	by  explicitly
       calling	the  constructor  and a	new expression,	and replaces it	with a
       call to std::make_shared.

	  auto my_ptr =	std::shared_ptr<MyPair>(new MyPair(1, 2));

	  // becomes

	  auto my_ptr =	std::make_shared<MyPair>(1, 2);

       This check also finds calls to std::shared_ptr::reset() with a new  ex-
       pression, and replaces it with a	call to	std::make_shared.

	  my_ptr.reset(new MyPair(1, 2));

	  // becomes

	  my_ptr = std::make_shared<MyPair>(1, 2);

   Options
       MakeSmartPtrFunction
	      A	 string	 specifying  the name of make-shared-ptr function. De-
	      fault is std::make_shared.

       MakeSmartPtrFunctionHeader
	      A	string specifying the corresponding header of  make-shared-ptr
	      function.	 Default is memory.

       IncludeStyle
	      A	string specifying which	include-style is used, llvm or google.
	      Default is llvm.

       IgnoreMacros
	      If  set to true, the check will not give warnings	inside macros.
	      Default is true.

       IgnoreDefaultInitialization
	      If set to	non-zero, the check does not suggest edits  that  will
	      transform	 default  initialization into value initialization, as
	      this can cause performance regressions. Default is 1.

   modernize-make-unique
       This check finds	the creation of	std::unique_ptr	objects	by  explicitly
       calling	the  constructor  and a	new expression,	and replaces it	with a
       call to std::make_unique, introduced in C++14.

	  auto my_ptr =	std::unique_ptr<MyPair>(new MyPair(1, 2));

	  // becomes

	  auto my_ptr =	std::make_unique<MyPair>(1, 2);

       This check also finds calls to std::unique_ptr::reset() with a new  ex-
       pression, and replaces it with a	call to	std::make_unique.

	  my_ptr.reset(new MyPair(1, 2));

	  // becomes

	  my_ptr = std::make_unique<MyPair>(1, 2);

   Options
       MakeSmartPtrFunction
	      A	 string	 specifying  the name of make-unique-ptr function. De-
	      fault is std::make_unique.

       MakeSmartPtrFunctionHeader
	      A	string specifying the corresponding header of  make-unique-ptr
	      function.	 Default is <memory>.

       IncludeStyle
	      A	string specifying which	include-style is used, llvm or google.
	      Default is llvm.

       IgnoreMacros
	      If  set to true, the check will not give warnings	inside macros.
	      Default is true.

       IgnoreDefaultInitialization
	      If set to	non-zero, the check does not suggest edits  that  will
	      transform	 default  initialization into value initialization, as
	      this can cause performance regressions. Default is 1.

   modernize-pass-by-value
       With move semantics added to the	language and the standard library  up-
       dated with move constructors added for many types it is now interesting
       to  take	 an argument directly by value,	instead	of by const-reference,
       and then	copy. This check allows	the compiler to	take care of  choosing
       the best	way to construct the copy.

       The  transformation  is usually beneficial when the calling code	passes
       an rvalue and assumes the move construction is a	cheap operation.  This
       short example illustrates how the construction of the value happens:

	  void foo(std::string s);
	  std::string get_str();

	  void f(const std::string &str) {
	    foo(str);	    // lvalue  -> copy construction
	    foo(get_str()); // prvalue -> move construction
	  }

       NOTE:
	  Currently,   only  constructors  are	transformed  to	 make  use  of
	  pass-by-value.  Contributions	that handle other situations are  wel-
	  come!

   Pass-by-value in constructors
       Replaces	 the  uses of const-references constructor parameters that are
       copied into class fields. The parameter is then moved with std::move().

       Since std::move() is a library function declared	in <utility> it	may be
       necessary to add	this include. The check	will add the include directive
       when necessary.

	   #include <string>

	   class Foo {
	   public:
	  -  Foo(const std::string &Copied, const std::string &ReadOnly)
	  -    : Copied(Copied), ReadOnly(ReadOnly)
	  +  Foo(std::string Copied, const std::string &ReadOnly)
	  +    : Copied(std::move(Copied)), ReadOnly(ReadOnly)
	     {}

	   private:
	     std::string Copied;
	     const std::string &ReadOnly;
	   };

	   std::string get_cwd();

	   void	f(const	std::string &Path) {
	     //	The parameter corresponding to 'get_cwd()' is move-constructed.	By
	     //	using pass-by-value in the Foo constructor we managed to avoid a
	     //	copy-construction.
	     Foo foo(get_cwd(),	Path);
	   }

       If the parameter	is used	more than once no transformation is  performed
       since  moved  objects  have  an undefined state.	It means the following
       code will be left untouched:

	  #include <string>

	  void pass(const std::string &S);

	  struct Foo {
	    Foo(const std::string &S) :	Str(S) {
	      pass(S);
	    }

	    std::string	Str;
	  };

   Known limitations
       A situation where the generated code can	be wrong is  when  the	object
       referenced is modified before the assignment in the init-list through a
       "hidden"	reference.

       Example:

	   std::string s("foo");

	   struct Base {
	     Base() {
	       s = "bar";
	     }
	   };

	   struct Derived : Base {
	  -  Derived(const std::string &S) : Field(S)
	  +  Derived(std::string S) : Field(std::move(S))
	     { }

	     std::string Field;
	   };

	   void	f() {
	  -  Derived d(s); // d.Field holds "bar"
	  +  Derived d(s); // d.Field holds "foo"
	   }

   Note	about delayed template parsing
       When  delayed  template	parsing	 is enabled, constructors part of tem-
       plated contexts;	templated constructors,	 constructors  in  class  tem-
       plates,	constructors  of  inner	classes	of template classes, etc., are
       not transformed.	Delayed	template parsing is enabled by default on Win-
       dows as a Microsoft extension: Clang Compiler User's Manual - Microsoft
       extensions.

       Delayed template	 parsing  can  be  enabled  using  the	-fdelayed-tem-
       plate-parsing flag and disabled using -fno-delayed-template-parsing.

       Example:

	    template <typename T> class	C {
	      std::string S;

	    public:
	  =  //	using -fdelayed-template-parsing (default on Windows)
	  =  C(const std::string &S) : S(S) {}

	  +  //	using -fno-delayed-template-parsing (default on	non-Windows systems)
	  +  C(std::string S) :	S(std::move(S))	{}
	    };

       SEE ALSO:
	  For  more  information  about	 the  pass-by-value  idiom, read: Want
	  Speed? Pass by Value.

   Options
       IncludeStyle
	      A	string specifying which	include-style is used, llvm or google.
	      Default is llvm.

       ValuesOnly
	      When true, the check only	warns about copied parameters that are
	      already passed by	value. Default is false.

   modernize-raw-string-literal
       This check selectively  replaces	 string	 literals  containing  escaped
       characters with raw string literals.

       Example:

	  const	char *const Quotes{"embedded \"quotes\""};
	  const	char *const Paragraph{"Line one.\nLine two.\nLine three.\n"};
	  const	char *const SingleLine{"Single line.\n"};
	  const	char *const TrailingSpace{"Look	here ->	\n"};
	  const	char *const Tab{"One\tTwo\n"};
	  const	char *const Bell{"Hello!\a  And	welcome!"};
	  const	char *const Path{"C:\\Program Files\\Vendor\\Application.exe"};
	  const	char *const RegEx{"\\w\\([a-z]\\)"};

       becomes

	  const	char *const Quotes{R"(embedded "quotes")"};
	  const	char *const Paragraph{"Line one.\nLine two.\nLine three.\n"};
	  const	char *const SingleLine{"Single line.\n"};
	  const	char *const TrailingSpace{"Look	here ->	\n"};
	  const	char *const Tab{"One\tTwo\n"};
	  const	char *const Bell{"Hello!\a  And	welcome!"};
	  const	char *const Path{R"(C:\Program Files\Vendor\Application.exe)"};
	  const	char *const RegEx{R"(\w\([a-z]\))"};

       The presence of any of the following escapes can	cause the string to be
       converted  to  a	raw string literal: \\,	\', \",	\?, and	octal or hexa-
       decimal escapes for printable ASCII characters.

       A string	literal	containing only	escaped	newlines is a  common  way  of
       writing	lines  of  text	output.	Introducing physical newlines with raw
       string literals in this case is likely  to  impede  readability.	 These
       string literals are left	unchanged.

       An  escaped  horizontal	tab,  form  feed, or vertical tab prevents the
       string literal from being converted. The	presence of a horizontal  tab,
       form feed or vertical tab in source code	is not visually	obvious.

   modernize-redundant-void-arg
       Find and	remove redundant void argument lists.

       Examples:
		 +----------------------------+-------------------------+
		 | Initial code		      |	Code with applied fixes	|
		 +----------------------------+-------------------------+
		 | int f(void);		      |	int f();		|
		 +----------------------------+-------------------------+
		 | int (*f(void))(void);      |	int (*f())();		|
		 +----------------------------+-------------------------+
		 | typedef		  int |	typedef	int (*f_t())();	|
		 | (*f_t(void))(void);	      |				|
		 +----------------------------+-------------------------+
		 | void	(C::*p)(void);	      |	void (C::*p)();		|
		 +----------------------------+-------------------------+
		 | C::C(void) {}	      |	C::C() {}		|
		 +----------------------------+-------------------------+
		 | C::~C(void) {}	      |	C::~C()	{}		|
		 +----------------------------+-------------------------+

   modernize-replace-auto-ptr
       This check replaces the uses of the deprecated class  std::auto_ptr  by
       std::unique_ptr	(introduced in C++11). The transfer of ownership, done
       by the copy-constructor and the	assignment  operator,  is  changed  to
       match std::unique_ptr usage by using explicit calls to std::move().

       Migration example:

	  -void	take_ownership_fn(std::auto_ptr<int> int_ptr);
	  +void	take_ownership_fn(std::unique_ptr<int> int_ptr);

	   void	f(int x) {
	  -  std::auto_ptr<int>	a(new int(x));
	  -  std::auto_ptr<int>	b;
	  +  std::unique_ptr<int> a(new	int(x));
	  +  std::unique_ptr<int> b;

	  -  b = a;
	  -  take_ownership_fn(b);
	  +  b = std::move(a);
	  +  take_ownership_fn(std::move(b));
	   }

       Since std::move() is a library function declared	in <utility> it	may be
       necessary to add	this include. The check	will add the include directive
       when necessary.

   Known Limitations
        If  headers  modification  is not activated or	if a header is not al-
	 lowed to be changed this check	will produce broken code  (compilation
	 error),  where	 the  headers' code will stay unchanged	while the code
	 using them will be changed.

        Client	code that declares a reference to an std::auto_ptr coming from
	 code that can't be migrated (such as a	header coming from a 3rd party
	 library) will produce a compilation error after  migration.  This  is
	 because  the type of the reference will be changed to std::unique_ptr
	 but the type returned by the library won't change, binding  a	refer-
	 ence  to  std::unique_ptr from	an std::auto_ptr. This pattern doesn't
	 make much sense and usually std::auto_ptr are stored by value (other-
	 wise what is the point	in using them instead  of  a  reference	 or  a
	 pointer?).

	   // <3rd-party header...>
	   std::auto_ptr<int> get_value();
	   const std::auto_ptr<int> & get_ref();

	   // <calling code (with migration)...>
	  -std::auto_ptr<int> a(get_value());
	  +std::unique_ptr<int>	a(get_value());	// ok, unique_ptr constructed from auto_ptr

	  -const std::auto_ptr<int> & p	= get_ptr();
	  +const std::unique_ptr<int> &	p = get_ptr(); // won't	compile

        Non-instantiated templates aren't modified.

	  template <typename X>
	  void f() {
	      std::auto_ptr<X> p;
	  }

	  // only 'f<int>()' (or similar) will trigger the replacement.

   Options
       IncludeStyle
	      A	string specifying which	include-style is used, llvm or google.
	      Default is llvm.

   modernize-replace-disallow-copy-and-assign-macro
       Finds  macro  expansions	of DISALLOW_COPY_AND_ASSIGN(Type) and replaces
       them with a deleted copy	constructor and	a deleted assignment operator.

       Before the delete keyword was introduced	in C++11 it was	 common	 prac-
       tice  to	 declare a copy	constructor and	an assignment operator as pri-
       vate members. This effectively makes them unusable to the public	API of
       a class.

       With the	advent of the delete keyword in	C++11 we can abandon the  pri-
       vate  access  of	 the  copy constructor and the assignment operator and
       delete the methods entirely.

       When running this check on a code like this:

	  class	Foo {
	  private:
	    DISALLOW_COPY_AND_ASSIGN(Foo);
	  };

       It will be transformed to this:

	  class	Foo {
	  private:
	    Foo(const Foo &) = delete;
	    const Foo &operator=(const Foo &) =	delete;
	  };

   Known Limitations
        Notice	that the migration example above  leaves  the  private	access
	 specification	 untouched.   You   might   want   to  run  the	 check
	 modernize-use-equals-delete to	get warnings for deleted functions  in
	 private sections.

   Options
       MacroName
	      A	 string	 specifying the	macro name whose expansion will	be re-
	      placed.  Default is DISALLOW_COPY_AND_ASSIGN.

       See:
       https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/language/function#Deleted_functions

   modernize-replace-random-shuffle
       This check will find occurrences	of std::random_shuffle and replace  it
       with  std::shuffle.  In	C++17  std::random_shuffle  will  no longer be
       available and thus we need to replace it.

       Below are two examples of what kind of occurrences will	be  found  and
       two examples of what it will be replaced	with.

	  std::vector<int> v;

	  // First example
	  std::random_shuffle(vec.begin(), vec.end());

	  // Second example
	  std::random_shuffle(vec.begin(), vec.end(), randomFunc);

       Both of these examples will be replaced with:

	  std::shuffle(vec.begin(), vec.end(), std::mt19937(std::random_device()()));

       The  second  example  will also receive a warning that randomFunc is no
       longer supported	in the same way	as before so if	 the  user  wants  the
       same  functionality, the	user will need to change the implementation of
       the randomFunc.

       One thing to be aware of	here is	that std::random_device	is  quite  ex-
       pensive	to  initialize.	 So if you are using the code in a performance
       critical	place, you probably want to initialize it elsewhere.   Another
       thing  is  that the seeding quality of the suggested fix	is quite poor:
       std::mt19937 has	an internal state of 624 32-bit	integers, but is  only
       seeded  with a single integer. So if you	require	higher quality random-
       ness, you should	consider seeding better, for example:

	  std::shuffle(v.begin(), v.end(), []()	{
	    std::mt19937::result_type seeds[std::mt19937::state_size];
	    std::random_device device;
	    std::uniform_int_distribution<typename std::mt19937::result_type> dist;
	    std::generate(std::begin(seeds), std::end(seeds), [&] { return dist(device); });
	    std::seed_seq seq(std::begin(seeds), std::end(seeds));
	    return std::mt19937(seq);
	  }());

   modernize-return-braced-init-list
       Replaces	explicit calls to the constructor in a return  with  a	braced
       initializer list. This way the return type is not needlessly duplicated
       in the function definition and the return statement.

	  Foo bar() {
	    Baz	baz;
	    return Foo(baz);
	  }

	  // transforms	to:

	  Foo bar() {
	    Baz	baz;
	    return {baz};
	  }

   modernize-shrink-to-fit
       Replace	copy  and  swap	 tricks	 on  shrinkable	 containers  with  the
       shrink_to_fit() method call.

       The shrink_to_fit() method is more readable and more effective than the
       copy and	swap trick to reduce the capacity of a	shrinkable  container.
       Note  that,  the	 shrink_to_fit() method	is only	available in C++11 and
       up.

   modernize-unary-static-assert
       The check diagnoses any static_assert declaration with an empty	string
       literal	and  provides  a fix-it	to replace the declaration with	a sin-
       gle-argument static_assert declaration.

       The check is only applicable for	C++17 and later	code.

       The following code:

	  void f_textless(int a) {
	    static_assert(sizeof(a) <= 10, "");
	  }

       is replaced by:

	  void f_textless(int a) {
	    static_assert(sizeof(a) <= 10);
	  }

   modernize-use-auto
       This check is responsible for using the auto type specifier  for	 vari-
       able  declarations to improve code readability and maintainability. For
       example:

	  std::vector<int>::iterator I = my_container.begin();

	  // transforms	to:

	  auto I = my_container.begin();

       The auto	type specifier will only be introduced in situations where the
       variable	type matches the type of the initializer expression. In	 other
       words  auto  should deduce the same type	that was originally spelled in
       the source.  However, not every situation should	be transformed:

	  int val = 42;
	  InfoStruct &I	= SomeObject.getInfo();

	  // Should not	become:

	  auto val = 42;
	  auto &I = SomeObject.getInfo();

       In this example using auto for builtins doesn't improve readability. In
       other situations	it makes  the  code  less  self-documenting  impairing
       readability  and	maintainability. As a result, auto is used only	intro-
       duced in	specific situations described below.

   Iterators
       Iterator	type specifiers	tend to	be long	 and  used  frequently,	 espe-
       cially  in  loop	 constructs.  Since the	functions generating iterators
       have a common format, the type specifier	can be	replaced  without  ob-
       scuring	the  meaning of	code while improving readability and maintain-
       ability.

	  for (std::vector<int>::iterator I = my_container.begin(),
					  E = my_container.end();
	       I != E; ++I) {
	  }

	  // becomes

	  for (auto I =	my_container.begin(), E	= my_container.end(); I	!= E; ++I) {
	  }

       The check will only replace iterator type-specifiers when  all  of  the
       following conditions are	satisfied:

        The iterator is for one of the	standard containers in std namespace:

	  array

	  deque

	  forward_list

	  list

	  vector

	  map

	  multimap

	  set

	  multiset

	  unordered_map

	  unordered_multimap

	  unordered_set

	  unordered_multiset

	  queue

	  priority_queue

	  stack

        The  iterator is one of the possible iterator types for standard con-
	 tainers:

	  iterator

	  reverse_iterator

	  const_iterator

	  const_reverse_iterator

        In addition to	using iterator types directly, typedefs	or other  ways
	 of  referring	to  those types	are also allowed. However, implementa-
	 tion-specific types for which a type like  std::vector<int>::iterator
	 is  itself  a typedef will not	be transformed.	Consider the following
	 examples:

	  // The following direct uses of iterator types will be transformed.
	  std::vector<int>::iterator I = MyVec.begin();
	  {
	    using namespace std;
	    list<int>::iterator	I = MyList.begin();
	  }

	  // The type specifier	for J would transform to auto since it's a typedef
	  // to	a standard iterator type.
	  typedef std::map<int,	std::string>::const_iterator map_iterator;
	  map_iterator J = MyMap.begin();

	  // The following implementation-specific iterator type for which
	  // std::vector<int>::iterator	could be a typedef would not be	transformed.
	  __gnu_cxx::__normal_iterator<int*, std::vector> K = MyVec.begin();

        The initializer for the variable being	declared is not	a braced  ini-
	 tializer  list.  Otherwise,  use  of auto would cause the type	of the
	 variable to be	deduced	as std::initializer_list.

   New expressions
       Frequently, when	a pointer is declared and initialized  with  new,  the
       pointee	type  is written twice:	in the declaration type	and in the new
       expression. In this case, the declaration type  can  be	replaced  with
       auto improving readability and maintainability.

	  TypeName *my_pointer = new TypeName(my_param);

	  // becomes

	  auto *my_pointer = new TypeName(my_param);

       The  check  will	also replace the declaration type in multiple declara-
       tions, if the following conditions are satisfied:

        All declared variables	have the same  type  (i.e.  all	 of  them  are
	 pointers to the same type).

        All declared variables	are initialized	with a new expression.

        The types of all the new expressions are the same than	the pointee of
	 the declaration type.

	  TypeName *my_first_pointer = new TypeName, *my_second_pointer	= new TypeName;

	  // becomes

	  auto *my_first_pointer = new TypeName, *my_second_pointer = new TypeName;

   Cast	expressions
       Frequently,  when  a  variable is declared and initialized with a cast,
       the variable type is written twice: in the declaration type and in  the
       cast  expression.  In  this  case, the declaration type can be replaced
       with auto improving readability and maintainability.

	  TypeName *my_pointer = static_cast<TypeName>(my_param);

	  // becomes

	  auto *my_pointer = static_cast<TypeName>(my_param);

       The  check  handles  static_cast,  dynamic_cast,	 const_cast,  reinter-
       pret_cast,  functional casts, C-style casts and function	templates that
       behave  as  casts,  such	 as  llvm::dyn_cast,  boost::lexical_cast  and
       gsl::narrow_cast.  Calls	to function templates are considered to	behave
       as casts	if the first template argument is explicit and is a type,  and
       the function returns that type, or a pointer or reference to it.

   Known Limitations
        If  the  initializer is an explicit conversion	constructor, the check
	 will not replace the type specifier even though it would be  safe  to
	 do so.

        User-defined iterators	are not	handled	at this	time.

   Options
       MinTypeNameLength
	      If the option is set to non-zero (default	5), the	check will ig-
	      nore  type names having a	length less than the option value. The
	      option affects expressions only, not iterators.  Spaces  between
	      multi-lexeme  type  names	 (long int) are	considered as one.  If
	      the RemoveStars option (see below) is set	to true,  then	*s  in
	      the type are also	counted	as a part of the type name.

	  // MinTypeNameLength = 0, RemoveStars=0

	  int a	= static_cast<int>(foo());	      // ---> auto a = ...
	  // length(bool *) = 4
	  bool *b = new	bool;			      // ---> auto *b =	...
	  unsigned c = static_cast<unsigned>(foo());  // ---> auto c = ...

	  // MinTypeNameLength = 5, RemoveStars=0

	  int a	= static_cast<int>(foo());		   // ---> int	a = ...
	  bool b = static_cast<bool>(foo());		   // ---> bool	b = ...
	  bool *pb = static_cast<bool*>(foo());		   // ---> bool	*pb = ...
	  unsigned c = static_cast<unsigned>(foo());	   // ---> auto	c = ...
	  // length(long <on-or-more-spaces> int) = 8
	  long int d = static_cast<long	int>(foo());	   // ---> auto	d = ...

	  // MinTypeNameLength = 5, RemoveStars=1

	  int a	= static_cast<int>(foo());		   // ---> int	a = ...
	  // length(int	* * ) =	5
	  int **pa = static_cast<int**>(foo());		   // ---> auto	pa = ...
	  bool b = static_cast<bool>(foo());		   // ---> bool	b = ...
	  bool *pb = static_cast<bool*>(foo());		   // ---> auto	pb = ...
	  unsigned c = static_cast<unsigned>(foo());	   // ---> auto	c = ...
	  long int d = static_cast<long	int>(foo());	   // ---> auto	d = ...

       RemoveStars
	      If  the option is	set to true (default is	false),	the check will
	      remove stars from	the non-typedef	pointer	types  when  replacing
	      type names with auto. Otherwise, the check will leave stars. For
	      example:

	  TypeName *my_first_pointer = new TypeName, *my_second_pointer	= new TypeName;

	  // RemoveStars = 0

	  auto *my_first_pointer = new TypeName, *my_second_pointer = new TypeName;

	  // RemoveStars = 1

	  auto my_first_pointer	= new TypeName,	my_second_pointer = new	TypeName;

   modernize-use-bool-literals
       Finds integer literals which are	cast to	bool.

	  bool p = 1;
	  bool f = static_cast<bool>(1);
	  std::ios_base::sync_with_stdio(0);
	  bool x = p ? 1 : 0;

	  // transforms	to

	  bool p = true;
	  bool f = true;
	  std::ios_base::sync_with_stdio(false);
	  bool x = p ? true : false;

   Options
       IgnoreMacros
	      If  set to true, the check will not give warnings	inside macros.
	      Default is true.

   modernize-use-default
       This check has been renamed to modernize-use-equals-default.

   modernize-use-default-member-init
       This check converts constructors' member	initializers into the new  de-
       fault  member  initializers  in	C++11.	Other member initializers that
       match the default member	initializer are	removed. This can  reduce  re-
       peated code or allow use	of '= default'.

	  struct A {
	    A()	: i(5),	j(10.0)	{}
	    A(int i) : i(i), j(10.0) {}
	    int	i;
	    double j;
	  };

	  // becomes

	  struct A {
	    A()	{}
	    A(int i) : i(i) {}
	    int	i{5};
	    double j{10.0};
	  };

       NOTE:
	  Only	converts  member  initializers	for built-in types, enums, and
	  pointers.  The readability-redundant-member-init check  will	remove
	  redundant member initializers	for classes.

   Options
       UseAssignment
	      If this option is	set to true (default is	false),	the check will
	      initialize members with an assignment. For example:

	  struct A {
	    A()	{}
	    A(int i) : i(i) {}
	    int	i = 5;
	    double j = 10.0;
	  };

       IgnoreMacros
	      If  this option is set to	true (default is true),	the check will
	      not warn about members declared inside macros.

   modernize-use-emplace
       The check flags insertions to an	STL-style container  done  by  calling
       the  push_back  method  with an explicitly-constructed temporary	of the
       container element type. In this case,  the  corresponding  emplace_back
       method  results	in  less  verbose and potentially more efficient code.
       Right now the check doesn't support push_front  and  insert.   It  also
       doesn't support insert functions	for associative	containers because re-
       placing	insert	with  emplace  may  result in speed regression,	but it
       might get support with some addition flag in the	future.

       By default only	std::vector,  std::deque,  std::list  are  considered.
       This list can be	modified using the ContainersWithPushBack option.

       This check also reports when an emplace-like method is improperly used,
       for  example  using emplace_back	while also calling a constructor. This
       creates a temporary that	requires at best a move	and at worst  a	 copy.
       Almost  all emplace-like	functions in the STL are covered by this, with
       try_emplace on std::map and std::unordered_map being the	 exception  as
       it  behaves  slightly  differently than all the others. More containers
       can be added with the EmplacyFunctions option, so long as the container
       defines a value_type type, and the emplace-like functions  construct  a
       value_type object.

       Before:

	  std::vector<MyClass> v;
	  v.push_back(MyClass(21, 37));
	  v.emplace_back(MyClass(21, 37));

	  std::vector<std::pair<int, int>> w;

	  w.push_back(std::pair<int, int>(21, 37));
	  w.push_back(std::make_pair(21L, 37L));
	  w.emplace_back(std::make_pair(21L, 37L));

       After:

	  std::vector<MyClass> v;
	  v.emplace_back(21, 37);
	  v.emplace_back(21, 37);

	  std::vector<std::pair<int, int>> w;
	  w.emplace_back(21, 37);
	  w.emplace_back(21L, 37L);
	  w.emplace_back(21L, 37L);

       By  default, the	check is able to remove	unnecessary std::make_pair and
       std::make_tuple calls from push_back calls on containers	 of  std::pair
       and  std::tuple.	 Custom	 tuple-like  types  can	 be  modified  by  the
       TupleTypes option;  custom  make	 functions  can	 be  modified  by  the
       TupleMakeFunctions option.

       The other situation is when we pass arguments that will be converted to
       a type inside a container.

       Before:

	  std::vector<boost::optional<std::string> > v;
	  v.push_back("abc");

       After:

	  std::vector<boost::optional<std::string> > v;
	  v.emplace_back("abc");

       In  some	cases the transformation would be valid, but the code wouldn't
       be exception safe. In this case the calls of  push_back	won't  be  re-
       placed.

	  std::vector<std::unique_ptr<int>> v;
	  v.push_back(std::unique_ptr<int>(new int(0)));
	  auto *ptr = new int(1);
	  v.push_back(std::unique_ptr<int>(ptr));

       This  is	 because  replacing it with emplace_back could cause a leak of
       this pointer if emplace_back would throw	exception  before  emplacement
       (e.g. not enough	memory to add a	new element).

       For  more  info	read item 42 - "Consider emplacement instead of	inser-
       tion." of Scott Meyers "Effective Modern	C++".

       The default smart pointers that	are  considered	 are  std::unique_ptr,
       std::shared_ptr,	 std::auto_ptr.	 To  specify  other  smart pointers or
       other classes use the SmartPointers option.

       Check also doesn't fire if any argument of the constructor  call	 would
       be:

	   a bit-field	(bit-fields can't bind to rvalue/universal reference)

	   a new expression (to avoid leak)

	   if the argument would be converted via derived-to-base cast.

       This check requires C++11 or higher to run.

   Options
       ContainersWithPushBack
	      Semicolon-separated  list	 of  class  names of custom containers
	      that support push_back.

       IgnoreImplicitConstructors
	      When true, the check will	ignore	implicitly  constructed	 argu-
	      ments of push_back, e.g.

		 std::vector<std::string> v;
		 v.push_back("a"); // Ignored when IgnoreImplicitConstructors is `true`.

	      Default is false.

       SmartPointers
	      Semicolon-separated  list	 of class names	of custom smart	point-
	      ers.

       TupleTypes
	      Semicolon-separated list of std::tuple-like class	names.

       TupleMakeFunctions
	      Semicolon-separated list of std::make_tuple-like function	names.
	      Those function calls will	be removed from	 push_back  calls  and
	      turned into emplace_back.

       EmplacyFunctions
	      Semicolon-separated  list	 of  containers	without	their template
	      parameters and some emplace-like method of the container.	 Exam-
	      ple: vector::emplace_back. Those methods will be checked for im-
	      proper  use and the check	will report when a temporary is	unnec-
	      essarily created.

   Example
	  std::vector<MyTuple<int, bool, char>>	x;
	  x.push_back(MakeMyTuple(1, false, 'x'));
	  x.emplace_back(MakeMyTuple(1,	false, 'x'));

       transforms to:

	  std::vector<MyTuple<int, bool, char>>	x;
	  x.emplace_back(1, false, 'x');
	  x.emplace_back(1, false, 'x');

       when TupleTypes is set to MyTuple, TupleMakeFunctions is	set to MakeMy-
       Tuple, and EmplacyFunctions is set to vector::emplace_back.

   modernize-use-equals-default
       This check replaces default bodies of special member functions  with  =
       default;.  The  explicitly  defaulted function declarations enable more
       opportunities in	optimization, because the compiler might treat explic-
       itly defaulted functions	as trivial.

	  struct A {
	    A()	{}
	    ~A();
	  };
	  A::~A() {}

	  // becomes

	  struct A {
	    A()	= default;
	    ~A();
	  };
	  A::~A() = default;

       NOTE:
	  Move-constructor and move-assignment operator	are not	supported yet.

   Options
       IgnoreMacros
	      If set to	true, the check	will not give warnings inside  macros.
	      Default is true.

   modernize-use-equals-delete
       This  check marks unimplemented private special member functions	with =
       delete.	To avoid false-positives, this check only applies in a	trans-
       lation unit that	has all	other member functions implemented.

	  struct A {
	  private:
	    A(const A&);
	    A& operator=(const A&);
	  };

	  // becomes

	  struct A {
	  private:
	    A(const A&)	= delete;
	    A& operator=(const A&) = delete;
	  };

       IgnoreMacros
	      If  this option is set to	true (default is true),	the check will
	      not warn about functions declared	inside macros.

   modernize-use-nodiscard
       Adds [[nodiscard]] attributes (introduced in C++17) to member functions
       in order	to highlight at	compile	time which return values should	not be
       ignored.

       Member functions	need to	satisfy	the following conditions to be consid-
       ered by this check:

	   no	[[nodiscard]],	[[noreturn]],	__attribute__((warn_unused_re-
	    sult)),  [[clang::warn_unused_result]]  nor	[[gcc::warn_unused_re-
	    sult]] attribute,

	   non-void return type,

	   non-template return	types,

	   const member function,

	   non-variadic functions,

	   no non-const reference parameters,

	   no pointer parameters,

	   no template	parameters,

	   no template	function parameters,

	   not	be a member of a class with mutable member variables,

	   no Lambdas,

	   no conversion functions.

       Such functions have no means of altering	any state  or  passing	values
       other  than via the return type.	Unless the member functions are	alter-
       ing state via some external call	(e.g. I/O).

   Example
	  bool empty() const;
	  bool empty(int i) const;

       transforms to:

	  [[nodiscard]]	bool empty() const;
	  [[nodiscard]]	bool empty(int i) const;

   Options
       ReplacementString
	      Specifies	a macro	to use instead of [[nodiscard]]. This is  use-
	      ful  when	 maintaining  source code that needs to	compile	with a
	      pre-C++17	compiler.

   Example
	  bool empty() const;
	  bool empty(int i) const;

       transforms to:

	  NO_DISCARD bool empty() const;
	  NO_DISCARD bool empty(int i) const;

       if the ReplacementString	option is set to NO_DISCARD.

       NOTE:
	  If the ReplacementString is not  a  C++  attribute,  but  instead  a
	  macro,  then	that macro must	be defined in scope or the fix-it will
	  not be applied.

       NOTE:
	  For alternative __attribute__	syntax options to  mark	 functions  as
	  [[nodiscard]]	     in	     non-c++17	    source	code.	   See
	  https://clang.llvm.org/docs/AttributeReference.html#nodiscard-warn-unused-result

   modernize-use-noexcept
       This check replaces deprecated dynamic  exception  specifications  with
       the  appropriate	 noexcept  specification (introduced in	C++11).	By de-
       fault this check	will replace throw() with noexcept, and	 throw(<excep-
       tion>[,...]) or throw(...) with noexcept(false).

   Example
	  void foo() throw();
	  void bar() throw(int)	{}

       transforms to:

	  void foo() noexcept;
	  void bar() noexcept(false) {}

   Options
       ReplacementString
	      Users  can  use  ReplacementString to specify a macro to use in-
	      stead of noexcept. This is useful	when maintaining  source  code
	      that  uses  custom  exception  specification  marking other than
	      noexcept.	Fix-it hints will only be generated  for  non-throwing
	      specifications.

   Example
	  void bar() throw(int);
	  void foo() throw();

       transforms to:

	  void bar() throw(int);  // No	fix-it generated.
	  void foo() NOEXCEPT;

       if the ReplacementString	option is set to NOEXCEPT.

       UseNoexceptFalse

       Enabled	by  default,  disabling	will generate fix-it hints that	remove
       throwing	dynamic	exception specs, e.g., throw(<something>),  completely
       without providing a replacement text, except for	destructors and	delete
       operators that are noexcept(true) by default.

   Example
	  void foo() throw(int)	{}

	  struct bar {
	    void foobar() throw(int);
	    void operator delete(void *ptr) throw(int);
	    void operator delete[](void	*ptr) throw(int);
	    ~bar() throw(int);
	  }

       transforms to:

	  void foo() {}

	  struct bar {
	    void foobar();
	    void operator delete(void *ptr) noexcept(false);
	    void operator delete[](void	*ptr) noexcept(false);
	    ~bar() noexcept(false);
	  }

       if the UseNoexceptFalse option is set to	false.

   modernize-use-nullptr
       The  check  converts the	usage of null pointer constants	(e.g. NULL, 0)
       to use the new C++11 nullptr keyword.

   Example
	  void assignment() {
	    char *a = NULL;
	    char *b = 0;
	    char c = 0;
	  }

	  int *ret_ptr() {
	    return 0;
	  }

       transforms to:

	  void assignment() {
	    char *a = nullptr;
	    char *b = nullptr;
	    char c = 0;
	  }

	  int *ret_ptr() {
	    return nullptr;
	  }

   Options
       NullMacros
	      Comma-separated list of macro names  that	 will  be  transformed
	      along  with  NULL.  By  default this check will only replace the
	      NULL macro and will skip any similar user-defined	macros.

   Example
	  #define MY_NULL (void*)0
	  void assignment() {
	    void *p = MY_NULL;
	  }

       transforms to:

	  #define MY_NULL NULL
	  void assignment() {
	    int	*p = nullptr;
	  }

       if the NullMacros option	is set to MY_NULL.

   modernize-use-override
       Adds override (introduced in C++11) to overridden virtual functions and
       removes virtual from those functions as it is not required.

       virtual on non base class implementations was used to help indicate  to
       the  user  that	a  function was	virtual. C++ compilers did not use the
       presence	of this	to signify an overridden function.

       In C++ 11 override and final keywords were introduced to	allow overrid-
       den functions to	be marked appropriately. Their presence	allows compil-
       ers to verify that an overridden	function correctly  overrides  a  base
       class implementation.

       This can	be useful as compilers can generate a compile time error when:

	   The	base class implementation function signature changes.

	   The	user has not created the override with the correct signature.

   Options
       IgnoreDestructors
	      If  set  to  true, this check will not diagnose destructors. De-
	      fault is false.

       AllowOverrideAndFinal
	      If set to	true, this check will not diagnose override as	redun-
	      dant  with final.	This is	useful when code will be compiled by a
	      compiler with warning/error checking  flags  requiring  override
	      explicitly  on  overridden  members, such	as gcc -Wsuggest-over-
	      ride/gcc -Werror=suggest-override.  Default is false.

       OverrideSpelling
	      Specifies	a macro	to use instead of  override.  This  is	useful
	      when  maintaining	 source	code that also needs to	compile	with a
	      pre-C++11	compiler.

       FinalSpelling
	      Specifies	a macro	to use instead of final. This is  useful  when
	      maintaining  source  code	 that  also  needs  to	compile	with a
	      pre-C++11	compiler.

       NOTE:
	  For	more   information   on	   the	  use	 of    override	   see
	  https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/language/override

   modernize-use-trailing-return-type
       Rewrites	 function signatures to	use a trailing return type (introduced
       in C++11). This transformation is purely	stylistic.   The  return  type
       before  the  function  name  is replaced	by auto	and inserted after the
       function	parameter list (and qualifiers).

   Example
	  int f1();
	  inline int f2(int arg) noexcept;
	  virtual float	f3() const && =	delete;

       transforms to:

	  auto f1() -> int;
	  inline auto f2(int arg) -> int noexcept;
	  virtual auto f3() const && ->	float =	delete;

   Known Limitations
       The following categories	of return types	cannot be rewritten currently:

        function pointers

        member	function pointers

        member	pointers

       Unqualified names in the	return type might erroneously refer to differ-
       ent entities after the rewrite.	Preventing such	errors requires	a full
       lookup of all unqualified names present in the return type in the scope
       of the trailing return type  location.	This  location	includes  e.g.
       function	 parameter names and members of	the enclosing class (including
       all inherited classes).	Such a lookup is currently not implemented.

       Given the following piece of code

	  struct S { long long value; };
	  S f(unsigned S) { return {S *	2}; }
	  class	CC {
	    int	S;
	    struct S m();
	  };
	  S CC::m() { return {0}; }

       a careless rewrite would	produce	the following output:

	  struct S { long long value; };
	  auto f(unsigned S) ->	S { return {S *	2}; } // error
	  class	CC {
	    int	S;
	    auto m() ->	struct S;
	  };
	  auto CC::m() -> S { return {0}; } // error

       This code fails to compile because the S	in the context of f refers  to
       the  equally named function parameter.  Similarly, the S	in the context
       of m refers to the equally named	class member.  The check can currently
       only detect and avoid a clash with a function parameter name.

   modernize-use-transparent-functors
       Prefer transparent functors to non-transparent ones. When using	trans-
       parent  functors,  the  type  does not need to be repeated. The code is
       easier to read, maintain	and less prone to errors. It is	 not  possible
       to introduce unwanted conversions.

	  // Non-transparent functor
	  std::map<int,	std::string, std::greater<int>>	s;

	  // Transparent functor.
	  std::map<int,	std::string, std::greater<>> s;

	  // Non-transparent functor
	  using	MyFunctor = std::less<MyType>;

       It  is not always a safe	transformation though. The following case will
       be untouched to preserve	the semantics.

	  // Non-transparent functor
	  std::map<const char *, std::string, std::greater<std::string>> s;

   Options
       SafeMode
	      If the option is set to true, the	check will not diagnose	 cases
	      where  using  a transparent functor cannot be guaranteed to pro-
	      duce identical results as	the original code. The	default	 value
	      for this option is false.

       This check requires using C++14 or higher to run.

   modernize-use-uncaught-exceptions
       This  check  will  warn on calls	to std::uncaught_exception and replace
       them with calls to std::uncaught_exceptions, since std::uncaught_excep-
       tion was	deprecated in C++17.

       Below are a few examples	of what	kind of	occurrences will be found  and
       what they will be replaced with.

	  #define MACRO1 std::uncaught_exception
	  #define MACRO2 std::uncaught_exception

	  int uncaught_exception() {
	    return 0;
	  }

	  int main() {
	    int	res;

	    res	= uncaught_exception();
	    // No warning, since it is not the deprecated function from	namespace std

	    res	= MACRO2();
	    // Warning,	but will not be	replaced

	    res	= std::uncaught_exception();
	    // Warning and replaced

	    using std::uncaught_exception;
	    // Warning and replaced

	    res	= uncaught_exception();
	    // Warning and replaced
	  }

       After applying the fixes	the code will look like	the following:

	  #define MACRO1 std::uncaught_exception
	  #define MACRO2 std::uncaught_exception

	  int uncaught_exception() {
	    return 0;
	  }

	  int main() {
	    int	res;

	    res	= uncaught_exception();

	    res	= MACRO2();

	    res	= std::uncaught_exceptions();

	    using std::uncaught_exceptions;

	    res	= uncaught_exceptions();
	  }

   modernize-use-using
       The check converts the usage of typedef with using keyword.

       Before:

	  typedef int variable;

	  class	Class{};
	  typedef void (Class::* MyPtrType)() const;

	  typedef struct { int a; } R_t, *R_p;

       After:

	  using	variable = int;

	  class	Class{};
	  using	MyPtrType = void (Class::*)() const;

	  using	R_t = struct { int a; };
	  using	R_p = R_t*;

       This check requires using C++11 or higher to run.

   Options
       IgnoreMacros
	      If  set to true, the check will not give warnings	inside macros.
	      Default is true.

   mpi-buffer-deref
       This check verifies if a	buffer passed to an MPI	(Message  Passing  In-
       terface)	 function  is  sufficiently  dereferenced.  Buffers  should be
       passed as a single pointer or array. As MPI function signatures specify
       void * for their	buffer types, insufficiently dereferenced buffers  can
       be  passed, like	for example as double pointers or multidimensional ar-
       rays, without a compiler	warning	emitted.

       Examples:

	  // A double pointer is passed	to the MPI function.
	  char *buf;
	  MPI_Send(&buf, 1, MPI_CHAR, 0, 0, MPI_COMM_WORLD);

	  // A multidimensional	array is passed	to the MPI function.
	  short	buf[1][1];
	  MPI_Send(buf,	1, MPI_SHORT, 0, 0, MPI_COMM_WORLD);

	  // A pointer to an array is passed to	the MPI	function.
	  short	*buf[1];
	  MPI_Send(buf,	1, MPI_SHORT, 0, 0, MPI_COMM_WORLD);

   mpi-type-mismatch
       This check verifies if buffer type and MPI (Message Passing  Interface)
       datatype	 pairs match for used MPI functions. All MPI datatypes defined
       by the MPI standard (3.1) are verified  by  this	 check.	 User  defined
       typedefs,  custom MPI datatypes and null	pointer	constants are skipped,
       in the course of	verification.

       Example:

	  // In	this case, the buffer type matches MPI datatype.
	  char buf;
	  MPI_Send(&buf, 1, MPI_CHAR, 0, 0, MPI_COMM_WORLD);

	  // In	the following case, the	buffer type does not match MPI datatype.
	  int buf;
	  MPI_Send(&buf, 1, MPI_CHAR, 0, 0, MPI_COMM_WORLD);

   objc-assert-equals
       Finds improper usages of	XCTAssertEqual and XCTAssertNotEqual  and  re-
       places them with	XCTAssertEqualObjects or XCTAssertNotEqualObjects.

       This  makes  tests  less	 fragile,  as  many improperly rely on pointer
       equality	for strings that have equal values.  This  assumption  is  not
       guarantted by the language.

   objc-avoid-nserror-init
       Finds improper initialization of	NSError	objects.

       According  to  Apple  developer	document, we should always use factory
       method errorWithDomain:code:userInfo: to	create new NSError objects in-
       stead of	[NSError alloc]	init]. Otherwise it will  lead	to  a  warning
       message during runtime.

       The     corresponding	 information	 about	  NSError    creation:
       https://developer.apple.com/library/content/documentation/Cocoa/Conceptual/ErrorHandlingCocoa/CreateCustomizeNSError/CreateCustomizeNSError.html

   objc-dealloc-in-category
       Finds implementations of	-dealloc in Objective-C	categories. The	 cate-
       gory implementation will	override any -dealloc in the class implementa-
       tion, potentially causing issues.

       Classes	implement  -dealloc to perform important actions to deallocate
       an object. If a category	on the	class  implements  -dealloc,  it  will
       override	 the class's implementation and	unexpected deallocation	behav-
       ior may occur.

   objc-forbidden-subclassing
       Finds Objective-C classes which are subclasses of classes which are not
       designed	to be subclassed.

       By default, includes a list of Objective-C classes which	 are  publicly
       documented as not supporting subclassing.

       NOTE:
	  Instead of using this	check, for code	under your control, you	should
	  add __attribute__((objc_subclassing_restricted)) before your @inter-
	  face	declarations  to ensure	the compiler prevents others from sub-
	  classing	  your	      Objective-C	 classes.	   See
	  https://clang.llvm.org/docs/AttributeReference.html#objc-subclassing-restricted

   Options
       ForbiddenSuperClassNames
	      Semicolon-separated  list	 of names of Objective-C classes which
	      do not support subclassing.

	      Defaults to  ABNewPersonViewController;ABPeoplePickerNavigation-
	      Controller;ABPersonViewController;ABUnknownPersonViewCon-
	      troller;NSHashTable;NSMapTable;NSPointerArray;NSPointerFunc-
	      tions;NSTimer;UIActionSheet;UIAlertView;UIImagePickerCon-
	      troller;UITextInputMode;UIWebView.

   objc-missing-hash
       Finds Objective-C implementations that implement	-isEqual: without also
       appropriately implementing -hash.

       Apple  documentation  highlights	 that objects that are equal must have
       the		    same		  hash			value:
       https://developer.apple.com/documentation/objectivec/1418956-nsobject/1418795-isequal?language=objc

       Note  that  the	check only verifies the	presence of -hash in scenarios
       where its omission could	result in unexpected behavior.	The  verifica-
       tion of the implementation of -hash is the responsibility of the	devel-
       oper,  e.g., through the	addition of unit tests to verify the implemen-
       tation.

   objc-nsinvocation-argument-lifetime
       Finds calls to NSInvocation methods under ARC that  don't  have	proper
       argument	 object	lifetimes. When	passing	Objective-C objects as parame-
       ters to the NSInvocation	methods	 getArgument:atIndex:  and  getReturn-
       Value:, the values are copied by	value into the argument	pointer, which
       leads  to  incorrect  releasing behavior	if the object pointers are not
       declared	__unsafe_unretained.

       For code:

	  id arg;
	  [invocation getArgument:&arg atIndex:2];

	  __strong id returnValue;
	  [invocation getReturnValue:&returnValue];

       The fix will be:

	  __unsafe_unretained id arg;
	  [invocation getArgument:&arg atIndex:2];

	  __unsafe_unretained id returnValue;
	  [invocation getReturnValue:&returnValue];

       The check will warn on being passed instance variable  references  that
       have  lifetimes	other than __unsafe_unretained,	but does not propose a
       fix:

	  // "id _returnValue" is declaration of instance variable of class.
	  [invocation getReturnValue:&self->_returnValue];

   objc-property-declaration
       Finds property declarations in Objective-C files	that do	not follow the
       pattern of property names in Apple's programming	 guide.	 The  property
       name should be in the format of Lower Camel Case.

       For code:

	  @property(nonatomic, assign) int LowerCamelCase;

       The fix will be:

	  @property(nonatomic, assign) int lowerCamelCase;

       The check will only fix 'CamelCase' to 'camelCase'. In some other cases
       we  will	only provide warning messages since the	property name could be
       complicated.  Users will	need to	come up	with a proper  name  by	 their
       own.

       This  check also	accepts	special	acronyms as prefixes or	suffixes. Such
       prefixes	or suffixes will suppress the Lower Camel Case check according
       to			       the				guide:
       https://developer.apple.com/library/content/documentation/Cocoa/Conceptual/CodingGuidelines/Articles/NamingBasics.html#//apple_ref/doc/uid/20001281-1002931-BBCFHEAB

       For	 a	 full	   list	     of	     well-known	     acronyms:
       https://developer.apple.com/library/content/documentation/Cocoa/Conceptual/CodingGuidelines/Articles/APIAbbreviations.html#//apple_ref/doc/uid/20001285-BCIHCGAE

       The		 corresponding		     style		 rule:
       https://developer.apple.com/library/content/documentation/Cocoa/Conceptual/CodingGuidelines/Articles/NamingIvarsAndTypes.html#//apple_ref/doc/uid/20001284-1001757

       The  check will also accept property declared in	category with a	prefix
       of lowercase letters followed by	a '_' to avoid	naming	conflict.  For
       example:

	  @property(nonatomic, assign) int abc_lowerCamelCase;

       The		 corresponding		     style		 rule:
       https://developer.apple.com/library/content/qa/qa1908/_index.html

   objc-super-self
       Finds invocations of -self on super instances in	initializers  of  sub-
       classes of NSObject and recommends calling a superclass initializer in-
       stead.

       Invoking	 -self on super	instances in initializers is a common program-
       mer error when the programmer's original	intent is to call a superclass
       initializer. Failing to call a superclass initializer  breaks  initial-
       izer chaining and can result in invalid object initialization.

   openmp-exception-escape
       Analyzes	 OpenMP	Structured Blocks and checks that no exception escapes
       out of the Structured Block it was thrown in.

       As per the OpenMP specification,	a structured block  is	an  executable
       statement, possibly compound, with a single entry at the	top and	a sin-
       gle  exit  at  the bottom. Which	means, throw may not be	used to	'exit'
       out of the structured block. If an exception is not caught in the  same
       structured block	it was thrown in, the behavior is undefined.

       FIXME: this check does not model	SEH, setjmp/longjmp.

       WARNING!	This check may be expensive on large source files.

   Options
       IgnoredExceptions
	      Comma-separated list containing type names which are not counted
	      as  thrown  exceptions  in  the check. Default value is an empty
	      string.

   openmp-use-default-none
       Finds OpenMP directives that are	allowed	to contain a  default  clause,
       but  either  don't  specify  it or the clause is	specified but with the
       kind other than none, and suggests to use the default(none) clause.

       Using default(none) clause forces developers to explicitly specify data
       sharing attributes for the variables referenced in the construct,  thus
       making  it  obvious  which  variables are referenced, and what is their
       data sharing attribute, thus increasing readability and possibly	making
       errors easier to	spot.

   Example
	  // ``for`` directive cannot have ``default`` clause, no diagnostics.
	  void n0(const	int a) {
	  #pragma omp for
	    for	(int b = 0; b <	a; b++)
	      ;
	  }

	  // ``parallel`` directive.

	  // ``parallel`` directive can	have ``default`` clause, but said clause is not
	  // specified,	diagnosed.
	  void p0_0() {
	  #pragma omp parallel
	    ;
	    // WARNING:	OpenMP directive ``parallel`` does not specify ``default``
	    //		clause.	Consider specifying ``default(none)`` clause.
	  }

	  // ``parallel`` directive can	have ``default`` clause, and said clause is
	  // specified,	with ``none`` kind, all	good.
	  void p0_1() {
	  #pragma omp parallel default(none)
	    ;
	  }

	  // ``parallel`` directive can	have ``default`` clause, and said clause is
	  // specified,	but with ``shared`` kind, which	is not ``none``, diagnose.
	  void p0_2() {
	  #pragma omp parallel default(shared)
	    ;
	    // WARNING:	OpenMP directive ``parallel`` specifies	``default(shared)``
	    //		clause.	Consider using ``default(none)`` clause	instead.
	  }

	  // ``parallel`` directive can	have ``default`` clause, and said clause is
	  // specified,	but with ``firstprivate`` kind,	which is not ``none``, diagnose.
	  void p0_3() {
	  #pragma omp parallel default(firstprivate)
	    ;
	    // WARNING:	OpenMP directive ``parallel`` specifies	``default(firstprivate)``
	    //		clause.	Consider using ``default(none)`` clause	instead.
	  }

   performance-faster-string-find
       Optimize	calls to  std::string::find()  and  friends  when  the	needle
       passed  is  a  single  character	 string	literal. The character literal
       overload	is more	efficient.

       Examples:

	  str.find("A");

	  // becomes

	  str.find('A');

   Options
       StringLikeClasses
	      Semicolon-separated list of names	of string-like classes.	By de-
	      fault only ::std::basic_string and ::std::basic_string_view  are
	      considered.  The check will only consider	member functions named
	      find,  rfind, find_first_of, find_first_not_of, find_last_of, or
	      find_last_not_of within these classes.

   performance-for-range-copy
       Finds C++11 for ranges where the	loop variable is copied	in each	itera-
       tion but	it would suffice to obtain it by const reference.

       The check is only applied to loop variables of types that are expensive
       to copy which means they	are not	trivially copyable or have a non-triv-
       ial copy	constructor or destructor.

       To ensure that it is safe to replace the	copy with  a  const  reference
       the following heuristic is employed:

       1. The loop variable is const qualified.

       2. The  loop variable is	not const, but only const methods or operators
	  are invoked on it, or	it is used as const reference or  value	 argu-
	  ment in constructors or function calls.

   Options
       WarnOnAllAutoCopies
	      When  true,  warns  on  any  use	of  auto  as  the  type	of the
	      range-based for loop variable. Default is	false.

       AllowedTypes
	      A	semicolon-separated list of  names  of	types  allowed	to  be
	      copied in	each iteration.	Regular	expressions are	accepted, e.g.
	      [Rr]ef(erence)?$ matches every type with suffix Ref, ref,	Refer-
	      ence  and	reference. The default is empty. If a name in the list
	      contains the sequence :: it is  matched  against	the  qualified
	      typename	(i.e. namespace::Type, otherwise it is matched against
	      only the type name (i.e. Type).

   performance-implicit-cast-in-loop
       This check has been renamed to performance-implicit-conversion-in-loop.

   performance-implicit-conversion-in-loop
       This warning appears in a range-based loop  with	 a  loop  variable  of
       const  ref  type	 where the type	of the variable	does not match the one
       returned	by the iterator. This means that an implicit  conversion  hap-
       pens, which can for example result in expensive deep copies.

       Example:

	  map<int, vector<string>> my_map;
	  for (const pair<int, vector<string>>&	p : my_map) {}
	  // The iterator type is in fact pair<const int, vector<string>>, which means
	  // that the compiler added a conversion, resulting in	a copy of the vectors.

       The  easiest  solution is usually to use	const auto& instead of writing
       the type	manually.

   performance-inefficient-algorithm
       Warns on	inefficient use	of STL algorithms on associative containers.

       Associative containers implement	some  of  the  algorithms  as  methods
       which  should  be  preferred to the algorithms in the algorithm header.
       The methods can take advantage of the order of the elements.

	  std::set<int>	s;
	  auto it = std::find(s.begin(), s.end(), 43);

	  // becomes

	  auto it = s.find(43);

	  std::set<int>	s;
	  auto c = std::count(s.begin(), s.end(), 43);

	  // becomes

	  auto c = s.count(43);

   performance-inefficient-string-concatenation
       This check warns	about the performance overhead arising	from  concate-
       nating strings using the	operator+, for instance:

	  std::string a("Foo"),	b("Bar");
	  a = a	+ b;

       Instead	of  this  structure you	should use operator+= or std::string's
       (std::basic_string) class member	function append(). For instance:

	  std::string a("Foo"),	b("Baz");
	  for (int i = 0; i < 20000; ++i) {
	      a	= a + "Bar" + b;
	  }

       Could be	rewritten in a greatly more efficient way like:

	  std::string a("Foo"),	b("Baz");
	  for (int i = 0; i < 20000; ++i) {
	      a.append("Bar").append(b);
	  }

       And this	can be rewritten too:

	  void f(const std::string&) {}
	  std::string a("Foo"),	b("Baz");
	  void g() {
	      f(a + "Bar" + b);
	  }

       In a slightly more efficient way	like:

	  void f(const std::string&) {}
	  std::string a("Foo"),	b("Baz");
	  void g() {
	      f(std::string(a).append("Bar").append(b));
	  }

   Options
       StrictMode
	      When false, the check will only check the	string usage in	while,
	      for and for-range	statements. Default is false.

   performance-inefficient-vector-operation
       Finds possible inefficient std::vector operations (e.g. push_back,  em-
       place_back) that	may cause unnecessary memory reallocations.

       It can also find	calls that add element to protobuf repeated field in a
       loop without calling Reserve() before the loop. Calling Reserve() first
       can avoid unnecessary memory reallocations.

       Currently,  the check only detects following kinds of loops with	a sin-
       gle statement body:

        Counter-based for loops start with 0:

	  std::vector<int> v;
	  for (int i = 0; i < n; ++i) {
	    v.push_back(n);
	    // This will trigger the warning since the push_back may cause multiple
	    // memory reallocations in v. This can be avoid by inserting a 'reserve(n)'
	    // statement before	the for	statement.
	  }

	  SomeProto p;
	  for (int i = 0; i < n; ++i) {
	    p.add_xxx(n);
	    // This will trigger the warning since the add_xxx may cause multiple memory
	    // reallocations. This can be avoid	by inserting a
	    // 'p.mutable_xxx().Reserve(n)' statement before the for statement.
	  }

        For-range loops like for (range-declaration : range_expression),  the
	 type  of range_expression can be std::vector, std::array, std::deque,
	 std::set, std::unordered_set, std::map, std::unordered_set:

	  std::vector<int> data;
	  std::vector<int> v;

	  for (auto element : data) {
	    v.push_back(element);
	    // This will trigger the warning since the 'push_back' may cause multiple
	    // memory reallocations in v. This can be avoid by inserting a
	    // 'reserve(data.size())' statement	before the for statement.
	  }

   Options
       VectorLikeClasses
	      Semicolon-separated list of names	of vector-like classes.	By de-
	      fault only ::std::vector is considered.

       EnableProto
	      When true, the check will	also warn  on  inefficient  operations
	      for  proto  repeated  fields. Otherwise, the check only warns on
	      inefficient vector operations. Default is	false.

   performance-move-const-arg
       The check warns

        if std::move()	is called with a constant argument,

        if std::move()	is called with an  argument  of	 a  trivially-copyable
	 type,

        if the	result of std::move() is passed	as a const reference argument.

       In  all	three  cases,  the  check  will	suggest	a fix that removes the
       std::move().

       Here are	examples of each of the	three cases:

	  const	string s;
	  return std::move(s);	// Warning: std::move of the const variable has	no effect

	  int x;
	  return std::move(x);	// Warning: std::move of the variable of a trivially-copyable type has no effect

	  void f(const string &s);
	  string s;
	  f(std::move(s));  // Warning:	passing	result of std::move as a const reference argument; no move will	actually happen

   Options
       CheckTriviallyCopyableMove
	      If true, enables detection of trivially copyable types  that  do
	      not have a move constructor. Default is true.

       CheckMoveToConstRef
	      If true, enables detection of std::move()	passed as a const ref-
	      erence argument. Default is true.

   performance-move-constructor-init
       "cert-oop11-cpp"	redirects here as an alias for this check.

       The  check  flags  user-defined move constructors that have a ctor-ini-
       tializer	initializing a member or base class through a copy constructor
       instead of a move constructor.

   performance-no-automatic-move
       Finds local variables that cannot be automatically moved	due to	const-
       ness.

       Under certain conditions, local values are automatically	moved out when
       returning  from a function. A common mistake is to declare local	lvalue
       variables const,	which prevents the move.

       Example [1]:

	  StatusOr<std::vector<int>> Cool() {
	    std::vector<int> obj = ...;
	    return obj;	 // calls StatusOr::StatusOr(std::vector<int>&&)
	  }

	  StatusOr<std::vector<int>> NotCool() {
	    const std::vector<int> obj = ...;
	    return obj;	 // calls `StatusOr::StatusOr(const std::vector<int>&)`
	  }

       The former version (Cool) should	be preferred over the latter  (Uncool)
       as it will avoid	allocations and	potentially large memory copies.

   Semantics
       In  the	example	above, StatusOr::StatusOr(T&&) have the	same semantics
       as long as the copy and move constructors for T have  the  same	seman-
       tics. Note that there is	no guarantee that S::S(T&&) and	S::S(const T&)
       have  the same semantics	for any	single S, so we're not providing auto-
       mated fixes for this check, and judgement should	be exerted when	making
       the suggested changes.

   -Wreturn-std-move
       Another case where the move cannot happen is the	following:

	  StatusOr<std::vector<int>> Uncool() {
	    std::vector<int>&& obj = ...;
	    return obj;	 // calls `StatusOr::StatusOr(const std::vector<int>&)`
	  }

       In that case the	fix is more consensual:	 just  return  std::move(obj).
       This is handled by the -Wreturn-std-move	warning.

   performance-no-int-to-ptr
       Diagnoses every integer to pointer cast.

       While casting an	(integral) pointer to an integer is obvious - you just
       get  the	integral value of the pointer, casting an integer to an	(inte-
       gral) pointer is	deceivingly different. While you will  get  a  pointer
       with  that  integral  value,  if	 you  got  that	 integral  value via a
       pointer-to-integer cast originally,  the	 new  pointer  will  lack  the
       provenance information from the original	pointer.

       So  while  (integral)  pointer to integer casts are effectively no-ops,
       and are transparent to the optimizer,  integer  to  (integral)  pointer
       casts are NOT transparent, and may conceal information from optimizer.

       While  that  may	 be  the  intention, it	is not always so. For example,
       let's take a look at a routine to align the pointer up to the  multiple
       of 16: The obvious, naive implementation	for that is:

	  char*	src(char* maybe_underbiased_ptr) {
	    uintptr_t maybe_underbiased_intptr = (uintptr_t)maybe_underbiased_ptr;
	    uintptr_t aligned_biased_intptr = maybe_underbiased_intptr + 15;
	    uintptr_t aligned_intptr = aligned_biased_intptr & (~15);
	    return (char*)aligned_intptr; // warning: avoid integer to pointer casts [performance-no-int-to-ptr]
	  }

       The check will rightfully diagnose that cast.

       But when	provenance concealment is not the goal of the code, but	an ac-
       cident, this example can	be rewritten as	follows, without using integer
       to pointer cast:

	  char*
	  tgt(char* maybe_underbiased_ptr) {
	      uintptr_t	maybe_underbiased_intptr = (uintptr_t)maybe_underbiased_ptr;
	      uintptr_t	aligned_biased_intptr =	maybe_underbiased_intptr + 15;
	      uintptr_t	aligned_intptr = aligned_biased_intptr & (~15);
	      uintptr_t	bias = aligned_intptr -	maybe_underbiased_intptr;
	      return maybe_underbiased_ptr + bias;
	  }

   performance-noexcept-move-constructor
       The check flags user-defined move constructors and assignment operators
       not marked with noexcept	or marked with noexcept(expr) where expr eval-
       uates to	false (but is not a false literal itself).

       Move  constructors of all the types used	with STL containers, for exam-
       ple, need to be declared	noexcept. Otherwise STL	will choose copy  con-
       structors instead. The same is valid for	move assignment	operations.

   performance-trivially-destructible
       Finds  types  that  could  be  made  trivially-destructible by removing
       out-of-line defaulted destructor	declarations.

	  struct A: TrivialType	{
	    ~A(); // Makes A non-trivially-destructible.
	    TrivialType	trivial_fields;
	  };
	  A::~A() = default;

   performance-type-promotion-in-math-fn
       Finds calls to C	math library functions (from math.h or,	in C++,	cmath)
       with implicit float to double promotions.

       For example, warns on ::sin(0.f), because this function's parameter  is
       a  double.  You	probably  meant	 to  call  std::sin(0.f)  (in C++), or
       sinf(0.f) (in C).

	  float	a;
	  asin(a);

	  // becomes

	  float	a;
	  std::asin(a);

   performance-unnecessary-copy-initialization
       Finds local variable declarations that are initialized using  the  copy
       constructor  of	a  non-trivially-copyable type but it would suffice to
       obtain a	const reference.

       The check is only applied if it is safe to replace the copy by a	 const
       reference.  This	 is  the  case when the	variable is const qualified or
       when it is only used as a const,	i.e. only const	methods	 or  operators
       are  invoked  on	it, or it is used as const reference or	value argument
       in constructors or function calls.

       Example:

	  const	string&	constReference();
	  void Function() {
	    // The warning will	suggest	making this a const reference.
	    const string UnnecessaryCopy = constReference();
	  }

	  struct Foo {
	    const string& name() const;
	  };
	  void Function(const Foo& foo)	{
	    // The warning will	suggest	making this a const reference.
	    string UnnecessaryCopy1 = foo.name();
	    UnnecessaryCopy1.find("bar");

	    // The warning will	suggest	making this a const reference.
	    string UnnecessaryCopy2 = UnnecessaryCopy1;
	    UnnecessaryCopy2.find("bar");
	  }

   Options
       AllowedTypes
	      A	semicolon-separated list of names of types allowed to be  ini-
	      tialized	by  copying.  Regular  expressions  are	accepted, e.g.
	      [Rr]ef(erence)?$ matches every type with suffix Ref, ref,	Refer-
	      ence and reference. The default is empty.	If a name in the  list
	      contains	the  sequence  ::  it is matched against the qualified
	      typename (i.e. namespace::Type, otherwise	it is matched  against
	      only the type name (i.e. Type).

       ExcludedContainerTypes
	      A	 semicolon-separated  list of names of types whose methods are
	      allowed to return	the const reference  the  variable  is	copied
	      from.  When an expensive to copy variable	is copy	initialized by
	      the return value from a type on this list	 the  check  does  not
	      trigger. This can	be used	to exclude types known to be const in-
	      correct or where the lifetime or immutability of returned	refer-
	      ences  is	not tied to mutations of the container.	An example are
	      view types that don't own	the underlying data. Like for Allowed-
	      Types above, regular expressions are accepted and	the  inclusion
	      of  ::  determines  whether the qualified	typename is matched or
	      not.

   performance-unnecessary-value-param
       Flags value parameter declarations of expensive to copy types that  are
       copied  for  each invocation but	it would suffice to pass them by const
       reference.

       The check is only applied to parameters of types	that are expensive  to
       copy  which means they are not trivially	copyable or have a non-trivial
       copy constructor	or destructor.

       To ensure that it is safe to replace the	value parameter	with  a	 const
       reference the following heuristic is employed:

       1. the parameter	is const qualified;

       2. the  parameter is not	const, but only	const methods or operators are
	  invoked on it, or it is used as const	reference or value argument in
	  constructors or function calls.

       Example:

	  void f(const string Value) {
	    // The warning will	suggest	making Value a reference.
	  }

	  void g(ExpensiveToCopy Value)	{
	    // The warning will	suggest	making Value a const reference.
	    Value.ConstMethd();
	    ExpensiveToCopy Copy(Value);
	  }

       If the parameter	is not const, only copied or assigned once and	has  a
       non-trivial  move-constructor  or move-assignment operator respectively
       the check will suggest to move it.

       Example:

	  void setValue(string Value) {
	    Field = Value;
	  }

       Will become:

	  #include <utility>

	  void setValue(string Value) {
	    Field = std::move(Value);
	  }

   Options
       IncludeStyle
	      A	string specifying which	include-style is used, llvm or google.
	      Default is llvm.

       AllowedTypes
	      A	semicolon-separated list of  names  of	types  allowed	to  be
	      passed   by  value.   Regular  expressions  are  accepted,  e.g.
	      [Rr]ef(erence)?$ matches every type with suffix Ref, ref,	Refer-
	      ence and reference. The default is empty.	If a name in the  list
	      contains	the  sequence  ::  it is matched against the qualified
	      typename (i.e. namespace::Type, otherwise	it is matched  against
	      only the type name (i.e. Type).

   portability-restrict-system-includes
       Checks  to  selectively allow or	disallow a configurable	list of	system
       headers.

       For example:

       In order	to only	allow zlib.h from the system you would set the options
       to -*,zlib.h.

	  #include <curses.h>	    // Bad: disallowed system header.
	  #include <openssl/ssl.h>  // Bad: disallowed system header.
	  #include <zlib.h>	    // Good: allowed system header.
	  #include "src/myfile.h"   // Good: non-system	header always allowed.

       In order	to allow everything except zlib.h from the  system  you	 would
       set the options to *,-zlib.h.

	  #include <curses.h>	    // Good: allowed system header.
	  #include <openssl/ssl.h>  // Good: allowed system header.
	  #include <zlib.h>	    // Bad: disallowed system header.
	  #include "src/myfile.h"   // Good: non-system	header always allowed.

       Since  the  options  support  globbing you can use wildcarding to allow
       groups of headers.

       -*,openssl/*.h will allow all openssl headers but disallow any others.

	  #include <curses.h>	    // Bad: disallowed system header.
	  #include <openssl/ssl.h>  // Good: allowed system header.
	  #include <openssl/rsa.h>  // Good: allowed system header.
	  #include <zlib.h>	    // Bad: disallowed system header.
	  #include "src/myfile.h"   // Good: non-system	header always allowed.

   Options
       Includes
	      A	string containing a comma separated glob list of  allowed  in-
	      clude  filenames.	 Similar  to the -checks glob list for running
	      clang-tidy itself, the two wildcard characters are * and	-,  to
	      include and exclude globs, respectively. The default is *, which
	      allows all includes.

   portability-simd-intrinsics
       Finds  SIMD  intrinsics	calls  and suggests std::experimental::simd (-
       P0214) alternatives.

       If the option Suggest is	set to true, for

	  _mm_add_epi32(a, b); // x86
	  vec_add(a, b);       // Power

       the check suggests an alternative: operator+ on std::experimental::simd
       objects.

       Otherwise, it just complains the	intrinsics are non-portable (and there
       are P0214 alternatives).

       Many architectures provide SIMD operations (e.g.	x86 SSE/AVX, Power Al-
       tiVec/VSX, ARM NEON). It	is common that SIMD code implementing the same
       algorithm, is written in	multiple target-dispatching pieces to optimize
       for different architectures or micro-architectures.

       The C++ standard	proposal P0214 and its extensions  cover  many	common
       SIMD operations.	By migrating from target-dependent intrinsics to P0214
       operations,  the	 SIMD  code can	be simplified and pieces for different
       targets can be unified.

       Refer to	P0214 for introduction and motivation  for  the	 data-parallel
       standard	library.

   Options
       Suggest
	      If this option is	set to true (default is	false),	the check will
	      suggest P0214 alternatives, otherwise it only points out the in-
	      trinsic function is non-portable.

       Std    The  namespace used to suggest P0214 alternatives. If not	speci-
	      fied,  std::  for	  -std=c++20   and   std::experimental::   for
	      -std=c++11.

   portability-std-allocator-const
       Report use of std::vector<const T> (and similar containers of const el-
       ements).	 These	are not	allowed	in standard C++, and should usually be
       std::vector<T> instead."

       Per C++ [allocator.requirements.general]: "T is any cv-unqualified  ob-
       ject  type",  std::allocator<const  T> is undefined. Many standard con-
       tainers use std::allocator by default and therefore their const	T  in-
       stantiations are	undefined.

       libc++  defines	std::allocator<const  T> as an extension which will be
       removed in the future.

       libstdc++ and MSVC do not support std::allocator<const T>:

	  // libstdc++ has a better diagnostic since https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=48101
	  std::deque<const int>	deque; // error: static	assertion failed: std::deque must have a non-const, non-volatile value_type
	  std::set<const int> set; // error: static assertion failed: std::set must have a non-const, non-volatile value_type
	  std::vector<int* const> vector; // error: static assertion failed: std::vector must have a non-const,	non-volatile value_type

	  // MSVC
	  // error C2338: static_assert	failed:	'The C++ Standard forbids containers of	const elements because allocator<const T> is ill-formed.'

       Code bases only compiled	with libc++ may	accrue such  undefined	usage.
       This  check  finds such code and	prevents backsliding while clean-up is
       ongoing.

   readability-avoid-const-params-in-decls
       Checks whether a	function declaration has parameters that are top level
       const.

       const values in declarations do not affect the signature	of a function,
       so they should not be put there.

       Examples:

	  void f(const string);	  // Bad: const	is top level.
	  void f(const string&);  // Good: const is not	top level.

   readability-braces-around-statements
       google-readability-braces-around-statements redirects here as an	 alias
       for this	check.

       Checks  that  bodies  of	 if  statements	 and loops (for, do while, and
       while) are inside braces.

       Before:

	  if (condition)
	    statement;

       After:

	  if (condition) {
	    statement;
	  }

   Options
       ShortStatementLines
	      Defines the minimal number of lines that	the  statement	should
	      have in order to trigger this check.

	      The number of lines is counted from the end of condition or ini-
	      tial  keyword  (do/else) until the last line of the inner	state-
	      ment. Default value 0 means that braces will  be	added  to  all
	      statements (not having them already).

   readability-const-return-type
       Checks  for functions with a const-qualified return type	and recommends
       removal of the const keyword. Such use of const is usually superfluous,
       and can prevent valuable	compiler optimizations.	 Does  not  (yet)  fix
       trailing	return types.

       Examples:

	  const	int foo();
	  const	Clazz foo();
	  Clazz	*const foo();

       Note  that  this	applies	strictly to top-level qualification, which ex-
       cludes pointers or references to	const values. For example,  these  are
       fine:

	  const	int* foo();
	  const	int& foo();
	  const	Clazz* foo();

   readability-container-contains
       Finds   usages	of  container.count()  and  container.find()  ==  con-
       tainer.end() which should be replaced by	a call to  the	container.con-
       tains() method introduced in C++	20.

       Whether	an  element  is	contained inside a container should be checked
       with contains instead of	count/find because contains conveys the	intent
       more clearly. Furthermore, for containers which permit multiple entries
       per key (multimap, multiset, ...),  contains  is	 more  efficient  than
       count because count has to do unnecessary additional work.

       Examples:
	    +----------------------------+----------------------------+
	    | Initial expression	 | Result		      |
	    +----------------------------+----------------------------+
	    | myMap.find(x)	      == | !myMap.contains(x)	      |
	    | myMap.end()		 |			      |
	    +----------------------------+----------------------------+
	    | myMap.find(x)	      != | myMap.contains(x)	      |
	    | myMap.end()		 |			      |
	    +----------------------------+----------------------------+
	    | if (myMap.count(x))	 | if (myMap.contains(x))     |
	    +----------------------------+----------------------------+
	    | bool	  exists       = | bool	exists	=  myMap.con- |
	    | myMap.count(x)		 | tains(x)		      |
	    +----------------------------+----------------------------+
	    | bool	  exists       = | bool	exists	=  myMap.con- |
	    | myMap.count(x) > 0	 | tains(x)		      |
	    +----------------------------+----------------------------+
	    | bool	  exists       = | bool	exists	=  myMap.con- |
	    | myMap.count(x) >=	1	 | tains(x)		      |
	    +----------------------------+----------------------------+
	    | bool	 missing       = | bool	missing	= !myMap.con- |
	    | myMap.count(x) ==	0	 | tains(x)		      |
	    +----------------------------+----------------------------+

       This check applies to std::set, std::unordered_set, std::map,  std::un-
       ordered_map  and	 the corresponding multi-key variants.	It is only ac-
       tive for	C++20 and later, as the	contains  method  was  only  added  in
       C++20.

   readability-container-data-pointer
       Finds  cases where code could use data()	rather than the	address	of the
       element at index	0 in a container. This pattern is commonly used	to ma-
       terialize a pointer to the backing data of a container. std::vector and
       std::string provide a data() accessor  to  retrieve  the	 data  pointer
       which should be preferred.

       This  also  ensures  that  in the case that the container is empty, the
       data pointer access does	not perform an errant memory access.

   readability-container-size-empty
       Checks whether a	call to	the size() method can be replaced with a  call
       to empty().

       The emptiness of	a container should be checked using the	empty()	method
       instead	of  the	 size()	 method. It is not guaranteed that size() is a
       constant-time function, and it is generally  more  efficient  and  also
       shows  clearer  intent  to use empty(). Furthermore some	containers may
       implement the empty() method but	not implement the size() method. Using
       empty() whenever	possible makes it easier to  switch  to	 another  con-
       tainer in the future.

       The  check issues warning if a container	has size() and empty() methods
       matching	following signatures:

	  size_type size() const;
	  bool empty() const;

       size_type can be	any kind of integer type.

   readability-convert-member-functions-to-static
       Finds non-static	member functions that can be made static  because  the
       functions don't use this.

       After  applying	modifications  as  suggested by	the check, running the
       check again might find more opportunities to mark member	functions sta-
       tic.

       After making a member function static, you might	want to	run the	 check
       readability-static-accessed-through-instance  to	replace	calls like In-
       stance.method() by Class::method().

   readability-delete-null-pointer
       Checks the if statements	where a	pointer's  existence  is  checked  and
       then  deletes the pointer.  The check is	unnecessary as deleting	a null
       pointer has no effect.

	  int *p;
	  if (p)
	    delete p;

   readability-duplicate-include
       Looks for duplicate includes and	removes	them.  The check  maintains  a
       list of included	files and looks	for duplicates.	 If a macro is defined
       or undefined then the list of included files is cleared.

       Examples:

	  #include <memory>
	  #include <vector>
	  #include <memory>

       becomes

	  #include <memory>
	  #include <vector>

       Because	of  the	 intervening  macro definitions, this code remains un-
       changed:

	  #undef NDEBUG
	  #include "assertion.h"
	  // ...code with assertions enabled

	  #define NDEBUG
	  #include "assertion.h"
	  // ...code with assertions disabled

   readability-else-after-return
       LLVM Coding Standards advises to	reduce indentation where possible  and
       where  it  makes	 understanding	code easier.  Early exit is one	of the
       suggested enforcements of that. Please do not use else or else if after
       something that interrupts control flow -	like return, break,  continue,
       throw.

       The following piece of code illustrates how the check works. This piece
       of code:

	  void foo(int Value) {
	    int	Local =	0;
	    for	(int i = 0; i <	42; i++) {
	      if (Value	== 1) {
		return;
	      }	else {
		Local++;
	      }

	      if (Value	== 2)
		continue;
	      else
		Local++;

	      if (Value	== 3) {
		throw 42;
	      }	else {
		Local++;
	      }
	    }
	  }

       Would be	transformed into:

	  void foo(int Value) {
	    int	Local =	0;
	    for	(int i = 0; i <	42; i++) {
	      if (Value	== 1) {
		return;
	      }
	      Local++;

	      if (Value	== 2)
		continue;
	      Local++;

	      if (Value	== 3) {
		throw 42;
	      }
	      Local++;
	    }
	  }

   Options
       WarnOnUnfixable
	      When true, emit a	warning	for cases where	the check can't	output
	      a	 Fix-It.  These	 can  occur  with declarations inside the else
	      branch that would	have an	extended lifetime if the  else	branch
	      was removed.  Default value is true.

       WarnOnConditionVariables
	      When true, the check will	attempt	to refactor a variable defined
	      inside  the  condition  of  the if statement that	is used	in the
	      else branch defining them	just before the	if statement. This can
	      only be done if the if statement is the last  statement  in  its
	      parent's scope.  Default value is	true.

   LLVM	alias
       There is	an alias of this check called llvm-else-after-return.  In that
       version	the  options  WarnOnUnfixable and WarnOnConditionVariables are
       both set	to false by default.

       This check helps	to enforce this	LLVM Coding Standards recommendation.

   readability-function-cognitive-complexity
       Checks function Cognitive Complexity metric.

       The metric is implemented as per	the  COGNITIVE	COMPLEXITY  by	Sonar-
       Source specification version 1.2	(19 April 2017).

   Options
       Threshold
	      Flag  functions with Cognitive Complexity	exceeding this number.
	      The default is 25.

       DescribeBasicIncrements
	      If set to	true, then for each function exceeding the  complexity
	      threshold	 the  check will issue additional diagnostics on every
	      piece of code (loop, if statement, etc.)	which  contributes  to
	      that complexity. See also	the examples below. Default is true.

       IgnoreMacros
	      If  set to true, the check will ignore code inside macros. Note,
	      that also	any macro arguments are	ignored, even if  they	should
	      count  to	 the  complexity.  As this might change	in the future,
	      this option isn't	guaranteed to be  forward-compatible.  Default
	      is false.

   Building blocks
       There are three basic building blocks of	a Cognitive Complexity metric:

   Increment
       The  following  structures increase the function's Cognitive Complexity
       metric (by 1):

        Conditional operators:

	     if()

	     else if()

	     else

	     cond ? true : false

        switch()

        Loops:

	     for()

	     C++11 range-based	for()

	     while()

	     do while()

        catch ()

        goto LABEL, goto *(&&LABEL)),

        sequences of binary logical operators:

	     boolean1 || boolean2

	     boolean1 && boolean2

   Nesting level
       While by	itself the nesting level does not change the function's	Cogni-
       tive Complexity metric, it is tracked, and is used by the  next,	 third
       building	 block.	  The  following structures increase the nesting level
       (by 1):

        Conditional operators:

	     if()

	     else if()

	     else

	     cond ? true : false

        switch()

        Loops:

	     for()

	     C++11 range-based	for()

	     while()

	     do while()

        catch ()

        Nested	functions:

	     C++11 Lambda

	     Nested class

	     Nested struct

        GNU statement expression

        Apple Block Declaration

   Nesting increment
       This is where the previous basic	building block,	 Nesting  level,  mat-
       ters.   The following structures	increase the function's	Cognitive Com-
       plexity metric by the current Nesting level:

        Conditional operators:

	     if()

	     cond ? true : false

        switch()

        Loops:

	     for()

	     C++11 range-based	for()

	     while()

	     do while()

        catch ()

   Examples
       The simplest case. This function	has Cognitive Complexity of 0.

	  void function0() {}

       Slightly	better example.	This function has Cognitive Complexity of 1.

	  int function1(bool var) {
	    if(var) // +1, nesting level +1
	      return 42;
	    return 0;
	  }

       Full example. This function has Cognitive Complexity of 3.

	  int function3(bool var1, bool	var2) {
	    if(var1) { // +1, nesting level +1
	      if(var2)	// +2 (1 + current nesting level of 1),	nesting	level +1
		return 42;
	    }

	    return 0;
	  }

       In the last example, the	 check	will  flag  function3  if  the	option
       Threshold is set	to 2 or	smaller. If the	option DescribeBasicIncrements
       is  set	to  true, it will additionally flag the	two if statements with
       the amounts by which they increase to the complexity  of	 the  function
       and the current nesting level.

   Limitations
       The metric is implemented with two notable exceptions:

	      	preprocessor  conditionals (#ifdef, #if, #elif,	#else, #endif)
		are not	accounted for.

	      	each method in a recursion cycle  is  not  accounted  for.  It
		can't  be  fully implemented, because cross-translational-unit
		analysis would be needed, which	is currently not  possible  in
		clang-tidy.

   readability-function-size
       google-readability-function-size	 redirects  here  as an	alias for this
       check.

       Checks for large	functions based	on various metrics.

   Options
       LineThreshold
	      Flag functions exceeding this number of lines. The default is -1
	      (ignore the number of lines).

       StatementThreshold
	      Flag functions exceeding this number  of	statements.  This  may
	      differ  significantly  from  the number of lines for macro-heavy
	      code. The	default	is 800.

       BranchThreshold
	      Flag functions exceeding this number of control statements.  The
	      default is -1 (ignore the	number of branches).

       ParameterThreshold
	      Flag functions that exceed a specified number of parameters. The
	      default is -1 (ignore the	number of parameters).

       NestingThreshold
	      Flag  compound  statements which create next nesting level after
	      NestingThreshold.	This may differ	 significantly	from  the  ex-
	      pected value for macro-heavy code. The default is	-1 (ignore the
	      nesting level).

       VariableThreshold
	      Flag  functions  exceeding  this number of variables declared in
	      the body.	 The default is	-1 (ignore the number  of  variables).
	      Please  note  that function parameters and variables declared in
	      lambdas, GNU Statement  Expressions,  and	 nested	 class	inline
	      functions	are not	counted.

   readability-identifier-length
       This check finds	variables and function parameters whose	length are too
       short.  The desired name	length is configurable.

       Special	cases  are supported for loop counters and for exception vari-
       able names.

   Options
       The following options are described below:

	   MinimumVariableNameLength, IgnoredVariableNames

	   MinimumParameterNameLength,	IgnoredParameterNames

	   MinimumLoopCounterNameLength, IgnoredLoopCounterNames

	   MinimumExceptionNameLength,	IgnoredExceptionVariableNames

       MinimumVariableNameLength
	      All variables (other than	 loop  counter,	 exception  names  and
	      function	parameters)  are expected to have at least a length of
	      MinimumVariableNameLength	(default is 3).	Setting	it to 0	 or  1
	      disables the check entirely.

		 int doubler(int x)   // warns that x is too short
		 {
		    return 2 * x;
		 }

	      This check does not have any fix suggestions in the general case
	      since variable names have	semantic value.

       IgnoredVariableNames
	      Specifies	a regular expression for variable names	that are to be
	      ignored. The default value is empty, thus	no names are ignored.

       MinimumParameterNameLength
	      All function parameter names are expected	to have	a length of at
	      least MinimumParameterNameLength (default	is 3). Setting it to 0
	      or 1 disables the	check entirely.

		 int i = 42;	// warns that 'i' is too short

	      This check does not have any fix suggestions in the general case
	      since variable names have	semantic value.

       IgnoredParameterNames
	      Specifies	a regular expression for parameters that are to	be ig-
	      nored.  The default value	is ^[n]$ for historical	reasons.

       MinimumLoopCounterNameLength
	      Loop counter variables are expected to have a length of at least
	      MinimumLoopCounterNameLength  characters (default	is 2). Setting
	      it to 0 or 1 disables the	check entirely.

		 // This warns that 'q'	is too short.
		 for (int q = 0; q < size; ++ q) {
		    // ...
		 }

       IgnoredLoopCounterNames
	      Specifies	a regular expression for counter names that are	to  be
	      ignored.	The default value is ^[ijk_]$; the first three symbols
	      for  historical  reasons and the last one	since it is frequently
	      used as a	"don't care" value,  specifically  in  tools  such  as
	      Google Benchmark.

		 // This does not warn by default, for historical reasons.
		 for (int i = 0; i < size; ++ i) {
		     //	...
		 }

       MinimumExceptionNameLength
	      Exception	 clause	 variables are expected	to have	a length of at
	      least MinimumExceptionNameLength (default	is 2). Setting it to 0
	      or 1 disables the	check entirely.

		 try {
		     //	...
		 }
		 // This warns that 'e'	is too short.
		 catch (const std::exception& x) {
		     //	...
		 }

       IgnoredExceptionVariableNames
	      Specifies	a regular expression for exception variable names that
	      are to be	ignored. The default value is ^[e]$ mainly for histor-
	      ical reasons.

		 try {
		     //	...
		 }
		 // This does not warn by default, for historical reasons.
		 catch (const std::exception& e) {
		     //	...
		 }

   readability-identifier-naming
       Checks for identifiers naming style mismatch.

       This check will try to enforce coding  guidelines  on  the  identifiers
       naming. It supports one of the following	casing types and tries to con-
       vert from one to	another	if a mismatch is detected

       Casing types include:

	   lower_case,

	   UPPER_CASE,

	   camelBack,

	   CamelCase,

	   camel_Snake_Back,

	   Camel_Snake_Case,

	   aNy_CasE.

       It  also	 supports  a fixed prefix and suffix that will be prepended or
       appended	to the identifiers, regardless of the casing.

       Many configuration options are available, in order to be	able to	create
       different rules for different kinds of  identifiers.  In	 general,  the
       rules  are  falling back	to a more generic rule if the specific case is
       not configured.

       The naming of virtual methods is	reported where they occur in the  base
       class,  but not where they are overridden, as it	can't be fixed locally
       there.  This also applies for pseudo-override patterns like CRTP.

   Options
       The following options are described below:

	   AbstractClassCase,	  AbstractClassPrefix,	  AbstractClassSuffix,
	    AbstractClassIgnoredRegexp,	AbstractClassHungarianPrefix

	   AggressiveDependentMemberLookup

	   ClassCase,	   ClassPrefix,	   ClassSuffix,	   ClassIgnoredRegexp,
	    ClassHungarianPrefix

	   ClassConstantCase,	  ClassConstantPrefix,	  ClassConstantSuffix,
	    ClassConstantIgnoredRegexp,	ClassConstantHungarianPrefix

	   ClassMemberCase,	   ClassMemberPrefix,	    ClassMemberSuffix,
	    ClassMemberIgnoredRegexp, ClassMemberHungarianPrefix

	   ClassMethodCase,	   ClassMethodPrefix,	    ClassMethodSuffix,
	    ClassMethodIgnoredRegexp

	   ConstantCase,	     ConstantPrefix,	       ConstantSuffix,
	    ConstantIgnoredRegexp, ConstantHungarianPrefix

	   ConstantMemberCase,	 ConstantMemberPrefix,	 ConstantMemberSuffix,
	    ConstantMemberIgnoredRegexp, ConstantMemberHungarianPrefix

	   ConstantParameterCase,		      ConstantParameterPrefix,
	    ConstantParameterSuffix,	       ConstantParameterIgnoredRegexp,
	    ConstantParameterHungarianPrefix

	   ConstantPointerParameterCase,      ConstantPointerParameterPrefix,
	    ConstantPointerParameterSuffix,
	    ConstantPointerParameterIgnoredRegexp,
	    ConstantPointerParameterHungarianPrefix

	   ConstexprFunctionCase,		      ConstexprFunctionPrefix,
	    ConstexprFunctionSuffix, ConstexprFunctionIgnoredRegexp

	   ConstexprMethodCase, ConstexprMethodPrefix,	ConstexprMethodSuffix,
	    ConstexprMethodIgnoredRegexp

	   ConstexprVariableCase,		      ConstexprVariablePrefix,
	    ConstexprVariableSuffix,	       ConstexprVariableIgnoredRegexp,
	    ConstexprVariableHungarianPrefix

	   EnumCase, EnumPrefix, EnumSuffix, EnumIgnoredRegexp

	   EnumConstantCase,	   EnumConstantPrefix,	   EnumConstantSuffix,
	    EnumConstantIgnoredRegexp, EnumConstantHungarianPrefix

	   FunctionCase,	    FunctionPrefix,	       FunctionSuffix,
	    FunctionIgnoredRegexp

	   GetConfigPerFile

	   GlobalConstantCase,	  GlobalConstantPrefix,	 GlobalConstantSuffix,
	    GlobalConstantIgnoredRegexp, GlobalConstantHungarianPrefix

	   GlobalConstantPointerCase,		  GlobalConstantPointerPrefix,
	    GlobalConstantPointerSuffix,   GlobalConstantPointerIgnoredRegexp,
	    GlobalConstantPointerHungarianPrefix

	   GlobalFunctionCase,	 GlobalFunctionPrefix,	 GlobalFunctionSuffix,
	    GlobalFunctionIgnoredRegexp

	   GlobalPointerCase,	  GlobalPointerPrefix,	  GlobalPointerSuffix,
	    GlobalPointerIgnoredRegexp,	GlobalPointerHungarianPrefix

	   GlobalVariableCase,	 GlobalVariablePrefix,	 GlobalVariableSuffix,
	    GlobalVariableIgnoredRegexp, GlobalVariableHungarianPrefix

	   IgnoreMainLikeFunctions

	   InlineNamespaceCase, InlineNamespacePrefix,	InlineNamespaceSuffix,
	    InlineNamespaceIgnoredRegexp

	   LocalConstantCase,	  LocalConstantPrefix,	  LocalConstantSuffix,
	    LocalConstantIgnoredRegexp,	LocalConstantHungarianPrefix

	   LocalConstantPointerCase,		   LocalConstantPointerPrefix,
	    LocalConstantPointerSuffix,	    LocalConstantPointerIgnoredRegexp,
	    LocalConstantPointerHungarianPrefix

	   LocalPointerCase,	  LocalPointerPrefix,	   LocalPointerSuffix,
	    LocalPointerIgnoredRegexp, LocalPointerHungarianPrefix

	   LocalVariableCase,	  LocalVariablePrefix,	  LocalVariableSuffix,
	    LocalVariableIgnoredRegexp,	LocalVariableHungarianPrefix

	   MacroDefinitionCase, MacroDefinitionPrefix,	MacroDefinitionSuffix,
	    MacroDefinitionIgnoredRegexp

	   MemberCase,	  MemberPrefix,	  MemberSuffix,	  MemberIgnoredRegexp,
	    MemberHungarianPrefix

	   MethodCase,	MethodPrefix, MethodSuffix, MethodIgnoredRegexp

	   NamespaceCase,	    NamespacePrefix,	      NamespaceSuffix,
	    NamespaceIgnoredRegexp

	   ParameterCase,	    ParameterPrefix,	      ParameterSuffix,
	    ParameterIgnoredRegexp, ParameterHungarianPrefix

	   ParameterPackCase,	  ParameterPackPrefix,	  ParameterPackSuffix,
	    ParameterPackIgnoredRegexp

	   PointerParameterCase,		       PointerParameterPrefix,
	    PointerParameterSuffix,		PointerParameterIgnoredRegexp,
	    PointerParameterHungarianPrefix

	   PrivateMemberCase,	  PrivateMemberPrefix,	  PrivateMemberSuffix,
	    PrivateMemberIgnoredRegexp,	PrivateMemberHungarianPrefix

	   PrivateMethodCase,	  PrivateMethodPrefix,	  PrivateMethodSuffix,
	    PrivateMethodIgnoredRegexp

	   ProtectedMemberCase, ProtectedMemberPrefix,	ProtectedMemberSuffix,
	    ProtectedMemberIgnoredRegexp, ProtectedMemberHungarianPrefix

	   ProtectedMethodCase, ProtectedMethodPrefix,	ProtectedMethodSuffix,
	    ProtectedMethodIgnoredRegexp

	   PublicMemberCase,	  PublicMemberPrefix,	   PublicMemberSuffix,
	    PublicMemberIgnoredRegexp, PublicMemberHungarianPrefix

	   PublicMethodCase,	   PublicMethodPrefix,	   PublicMethodSuffix,
	    PublicMethodIgnoredRegexp

	   ScopedEnumConstantCase,		     ScopedEnumConstantPrefix,
	    ScopedEnumConstantSuffix, ScopedEnumConstantIgnoredRegexp

	   StaticConstantCase,	  StaticConstantPrefix,	 StaticConstantSuffix,
	    StaticConstantIgnoredRegexp, StaticConstantHungarianPrefix

	   StaticVariableCase,	 StaticVariablePrefix,	 StaticVariableSuffix,
	    StaticVariableIgnoredRegexp, StaticVariableHungarianPrefix

	   StructCase,	StructPrefix, StructSuffix, StructIgnoredRegexp

	   TemplateParameterCase,		      TemplateParameterPrefix,
	    TemplateParameterSuffix, TemplateParameterIgnoredRegexp

	   TemplateTemplateParameterCase,    TemplateTemplateParameterPrefix,
	    TemplateTemplateParameterSuffix,
	    TemplateTemplateParameterIgnoredRegexp

	   TypeAliasCase,	    TypeAliasPrefix,	      TypeAliasSuffix,
	    TypeAliasIgnoredRegexp

	   TypedefCase, TypedefPrefix,	TypedefSuffix, TypedefIgnoredRegexp

	   TypeTemplateParameterCase,		  TypeTemplateParameterPrefix,
	    TypeTemplateParameterSuffix, TypeTemplateParameterIgnoredRegexp

	   UnionCase, UnionPrefix, UnionSuffix, UnionIgnoredRegexp

	   ValueTemplateParameterCase,		 ValueTemplateParameterPrefix,
	    ValueTemplateParameterSuffix, ValueTemplateParameterIgnoredRegexp

	   VariableCase,	    VariablePrefix,	       VariableSuffix,
	    VariableIgnoredRegexp, VariableHungarianPrefix

	   VirtualMethodCase,	  VirtualMethodPrefix,	  VirtualMethodSuffix,
	    VirtualMethodIgnoredRegexp

       AbstractClassCase
	      When defined, the	check will ensure abstract class names conform
	      to the selected casing.

       AbstractClassPrefix
	      When defined, the	check will ensure abstract  class  names  will
	      add the prefixed with the	given value (regardless	of casing).

       AbstractClassIgnoredRegexp
	      Identifier  naming  checks  won't	be enforced for	abstract class
	      names matching this regular expression.

       AbstractClassSuffix
	      When defined, the	check will ensure abstract  class  names  will
	      add the suffix with the given value (regardless of casing).

       AbstractClassHungarianPrefix
	      When  enabled,  the  check  ensures that the declared identifier
	      will have	a Hungarian notation  prefix  based  on	 the  declared
	      type.

       For example using values	of:

	   AbstractClassCase of lower_case

	   AbstractClassPrefix	of pre_

	   AbstractClassSuffix	of _post

	   AbstractClassHungarianPrefix of On

       Identifies and/or transforms abstract class names as follows:

       Before:

	  class	ABSTRACT_CLASS {
	  public:
	    ABSTRACT_CLASS();
	  };

       After:

	  class	pre_abstract_class_post	{
	  public:
	    pre_abstract_class_post();
	  };

       AggressiveDependentMemberLookup
	      When  set	 to true the check will	look in	dependent base classes
	      for dependent member references that  need  changing.  This  can
	      lead  to	errors	with  template	specializations	so the default
	      value is false.

       For example using values	of:

	   ClassMemberCase of lower_case

       Before:

	  template <typename T>
	  struct Base {
	    T BadNamedMember;
	  };

	  template <typename T>
	  struct Derived : Base<T> {
	    void reset() {
	      this->BadNamedMember = 0;
	    }
	  };

       After if	AggressiveDependentMemberLookup	is false:

	  template <typename T>
	  struct Base {
	    T bad_named_member;
	  };

	  template <typename T>
	  struct Derived : Base<T> {
	    void reset() {
	      this->BadNamedMember = 0;
	    }
	  };

       After if	AggressiveDependentMemberLookup	is true:

	  template <typename T>
	  struct Base {
	    T bad_named_member;
	  };

	  template <typename T>
	  struct Derived : Base<T> {
	    void reset() {
	      this->bad_named_member = 0;
	    }
	  };

       ClassCase
	      When defined, the	check will ensure class	names conform  to  the
	      selected casing.

       ClassPrefix
	      When  defined,  the  check  will ensure class names will add the
	      prefixed with the	given value (regardless	of casing).

       ClassIgnoredRegexp
	      Identifier naming	checks	won't  be  enforced  for  class	 names
	      matching this regular expression.

       ClassSuffix
	      When  defined,  the  check  will ensure class names will add the
	      suffix with the given value (regardless of casing).

       ClassHungarianPrefix
	      When enabled, the	check ensures  that  the  declared  identifier
	      will  have  a  Hungarian	notation  prefix based on the declared
	      type.

       For example using values	of:

	   ClassCase of lower_case

	   ClassPrefix	of pre_

	   ClassSuffix	of _post

	   ClassHungarianPrefix of On

       Identifies and/or transforms class names	as follows:

       Before:

	  class	FOO {
	  public:
	    FOO();
	    ~FOO();
	  };

       After:

	  class	pre_foo_post {
	  public:
	    pre_foo_post();
	    ~pre_foo_post();
	  };

       ClassConstantCase
	      When defined, the	check will ensure class	constant names conform
	      to the selected casing.

       ClassConstantPrefix
	      When defined, the	check will ensure class	 constant  names  will
	      add the prefixed with the	given value (regardless	of casing).

       ClassConstantIgnoredRegexp
	      Identifier  naming  checks  won't	be enforced for	class constant
	      names matching this regular expression.

       ClassConstantSuffix
	      When defined, the	check will ensure class	 constant  names  will
	      add the suffix with the given value (regardless of casing).

       ClassConstantHungarianPrefix
	      When  enabled,  the  check  ensures that the declared identifier
	      will have	a Hungarian notation  prefix  based  on	 the  declared
	      type.

       For example using values	of:

	   ClassConstantCase of lower_case

	   ClassConstantPrefix	of pre_

	   ClassConstantSuffix	of _post

	   ClassConstantHungarianPrefix of On

       Identifies and/or transforms class constant names as follows:

       Before:

	  class	FOO {
	  public:
	    static const int CLASS_CONSTANT;
	  };

       After:

	  class	FOO {
	  public:
	    static const int pre_class_constant_post;
	  };

       ClassMemberCase
	      When  defined,  the check	will ensure class member names conform
	      to the selected casing.

       ClassMemberPrefix
	      When defined, the	check will ensure class	member names will  add
	      the prefixed with	the given value	(regardless of casing).

       ClassMemberIgnoredRegexp
	      Identifier  naming  checks  won't	 be  enforced for class	member
	      names matching this regular expression.

       ClassMemberSuffix
	      When defined, the	check will ensure class	member names will  add
	      the suffix with the given	value (regardless of casing).

       ClassMemberHungarianPrefix
	      When  enabled,  the  check  ensures that the declared identifier
	      will have	a Hungarian notation  prefix  based  on	 the  declared
	      type.

       For example using values	of:

	   ClassMemberCase of lower_case

	   ClassMemberPrefix of pre_

	   ClassMemberSuffix of _post

	   ClassMemberHungarianPrefix of On

       Identifies and/or transforms class member names as follows:

       Before:

	  class	FOO {
	  public:
	    static int CLASS_CONSTANT;
	  };

       After:

	  class	FOO {
	  public:
	    static int pre_class_constant_post;
	  };

       ClassMethodCase
	      When  defined,  the check	will ensure class method names conform
	      to the selected casing.

       ClassMethodPrefix
	      When defined, the	check will ensure class	method names will  add
	      the prefixed with	the given value	(regardless of casing).

       ClassMethodIgnoredRegexp
	      Identifier  naming  checks  won't	 be  enforced for class	method
	      names matching this regular expression.

       ClassMethodSuffix
	      When defined, the	check will ensure class	method names will  add
	      the suffix with the given	value (regardless of casing).

       For example using values	of:

	   ClassMethodCase of lower_case

	   ClassMethodPrefix of pre_

	   ClassMethodSuffix of _post

       Identifies and/or transforms class method names as follows:

       Before:

	  class	FOO {
	  public:
	    int	CLASS_MEMBER();
	  };

       After:

	  class	FOO {
	  public:
	    int	pre_class_member_post();
	  };

       ConstantCase
	      When  defined,  the  check will ensure constant names conform to
	      the selected casing.

       ConstantPrefix
	      When defined, the	check will ensure constant names will add  the
	      prefixed with the	given value (regardless	of casing).

       ConstantIgnoredRegexp
	      Identifier  naming  checks  won't	be enforced for	constant names
	      matching this regular expression.

       ConstantSuffix
	      When defined, the	check will ensure constant names will add  the
	      suffix with the given value (regardless of casing).

       ConstantHungarianPrefix
	      When  enabled,  the  check  ensures that the declared identifier
	      will have	a Hungarian notation  prefix  based  on	 the  declared
	      type.

       For example using values	of:

	   ConstantCase of lower_case

	   ConstantPrefix of pre_

	   ConstantSuffix of _post

	   ConstantHungarianPrefix of On

       Identifies and/or transforms constant names as follows:

       Before:

	  void function() { unsigned const MyConst_array[] = {1, 2, 3};	}

       After:

	  void function() { unsigned const pre_myconst_array_post[] = {1, 2, 3}; }

       ConstantMemberCase
	      When  defined,  the check	will ensure constant member names con-
	      form to the selected casing.

       ConstantMemberPrefix
	      When defined, the	check will ensure constant member  names  will
	      add the prefixed with the	given value (regardless	of casing).

       ConstantMemberIgnoredRegexp
	      Identifier  naming  checks won't be enforced for constant	member
	      names matching this regular expression.

       ConstantMemberSuffix
	      When defined, the	check will ensure constant member  names  will
	      add the suffix with the given value (regardless of casing).

       ConstantMemberHungarianPrefix
	      When  enabled,  the  check  ensures that the declared identifier
	      will have	a Hungarian notation  prefix  based  on	 the  declared
	      type.

       For example using values	of:

	   ConstantMemberCase of lower_case

	   ConstantMemberPrefix of pre_

	   ConstantMemberSuffix of _post

	   ConstantMemberHungarianPrefix of On

       Identifies and/or transforms constant member names as follows:

       Before:

	  class	Foo {
	    char const MY_ConstMember_string[4]	= "123";
	  }

       After:

	  class	Foo {
	    char const pre_my_constmember_string_post[4] = "123";
	  }

       ConstantParameterCase
	      When  defined,  the  check  will ensure constant parameter names
	      conform to the selected casing.

       ConstantParameterPrefix
	      When defined, the	check will  ensure  constant  parameter	 names
	      will  add	 the prefixed with the given value (regardless of cas-
	      ing).

       ConstantParameterIgnoredRegexp
	      Identifier naming	checks won't be	enforced for constant  parame-
	      ter names	matching this regular expression.

       ConstantParameterSuffix
	      When  defined,  the  check  will ensure constant parameter names
	      will add the suffix with the given value (regardless of casing).

       ConstantParameterHungarianPrefix
	      When enabled, the	check ensures  that  the  declared  identifier
	      will  have  a  Hungarian	notation  prefix based on the declared
	      type.

       For example using values	of:

	   ConstantParameterCase of lower_case

	   ConstantParameterPrefix of pre_

	   ConstantParameterSuffix of _post

	   ConstantParameterHungarianPrefix of	On

       Identifies and/or transforms constant parameter names as	follows:

       Before:

	  void GLOBAL_FUNCTION(int PARAMETER_1,	int const CONST_parameter);

       After:

	  void GLOBAL_FUNCTION(int PARAMETER_1,	int const pre_const_parameter_post);

       ConstantPointerParameterCase
	      When defined, the	check will ensure constant  pointer  parameter
	      names conform to the selected casing.

       ConstantPointerParameterPrefix
	      When  defined,  the check	will ensure constant pointer parameter
	      names will add the prefixed with the given value (regardless  of
	      casing).

       ConstantPointerParameterIgnoredRegexp
	      Identifier  naming checks	won't be enforced for constant pointer
	      parameter	names matching this regular expression.

       ConstantPointerParameterSuffix
	      When defined, the	check will ensure constant  pointer  parameter
	      names  will  add	the suffix with	the given value	(regardless of
	      casing).

       ConstantPointerParameterHungarianPrefix
	      When enabled, the	check ensures  that  the  declared  identifier
	      will  have  a  Hungarian	notation  prefix based on the declared
	      type.

       For example using values	of:

	   ConstantPointerParameterCase of lower_case

	   ConstantPointerParameterPrefix of pre_

	   ConstantPointerParameterSuffix of _post

	   ConstantPointerParameterHungarianPrefix of On

       Identifies and/or transforms constant pointer parameter names  as  fol-
       lows:

       Before:

	  void GLOBAL_FUNCTION(int const *CONST_parameter);

       After:

	  void GLOBAL_FUNCTION(int const *pre_const_parameter_post);

       ConstexprFunctionCase
	      When  defined,  the  check  will ensure constexpr	function names
	      conform to the selected casing.

       ConstexprFunctionPrefix
	      When defined, the	check will  ensure  constexpr  function	 names
	      will  add	 the prefixed with the given value (regardless of cas-
	      ing).

       ConstexprFunctionIgnoredRegexp
	      Identifier naming	checks won't be	enforced for  constexpr	 func-
	      tion names matching this regular expression.

       ConstexprFunctionSuffix
	      When  defined,  the  check  will ensure constexpr	function names
	      will add the suffix with the given value (regardless of casing).

       For example using values	of:

	   ConstexprFunctionCase of lower_case

	   ConstexprFunctionPrefix of pre_

	   ConstexprFunctionSuffix of _post

       Identifies and/or transforms constexpr function names as	follows:

       Before:

	  constexpr int	CE_function() {	return 3; }

       After:

	  constexpr int	pre_ce_function_post() { return	3; }

       ConstexprMethodCase
	      When defined, the	check will ensure constexpr method names  con-
	      form to the selected casing.

       ConstexprMethodPrefix
	      When  defined, the check will ensure constexpr method names will
	      add the prefixed with the	given value (regardless	of casing).

       ConstexprMethodIgnoredRegexp
	      Identifier naming	checks won't be	enforced for constexpr	method
	      names matching this regular expression.

       ConstexprMethodSuffix
	      When  defined, the check will ensure constexpr method names will
	      add the suffix with the given value (regardless of casing).

       For example using values	of:

	   ConstexprMethodCase	of lower_case

	   ConstexprMethodPrefix of pre_

	   ConstexprMethodSuffix of _post

       Identifies and/or transforms constexpr method names as follows:

       Before:

	  class	Foo {
	  public:
	    constexpr int CST_expr_Method() { return 2;	}
	  }

       After:

	  class	Foo {
	  public:
	    constexpr int pre_cst_expr_method_post() { return 2; }
	  }

       ConstexprVariableCase
	      When defined, the	check will  ensure  constexpr  variable	 names
	      conform to the selected casing.

       ConstexprVariablePrefix
	      When  defined,  the  check  will ensure constexpr	variable names
	      will add the prefixed with the given value (regardless  of  cas-
	      ing).

       ConstexprVariableIgnoredRegexp
	      Identifier  naming  checks won't be enforced for constexpr vari-
	      able names matching this regular expression.

       ConstexprVariableSuffix
	      When defined, the	check will  ensure  constexpr  variable	 names
	      will add the suffix with the given value (regardless of casing).

       ConstexprVariableHungarianPrefix
	      When  enabled,  the  check  ensures that the declared identifier
	      will have	a Hungarian notation  prefix  based  on	 the  declared
	      type.

       For example using values	of:

	   ConstexprVariableCase of lower_case

	   ConstexprVariablePrefix of pre_

	   ConstexprVariableSuffix of _post

	   ConstexprVariableHungarianPrefix of	On

       Identifies and/or transforms constexpr variable names as	follows:

       Before:

	  constexpr int	ConstExpr_variable = MyConstant;

       After:

	  constexpr int	pre_constexpr_variable_post = MyConstant;

       EnumCase
	      When defined, the	check will ensure enumeration names conform to
	      the selected casing.

       EnumPrefix
	      When  defined,  the check	will ensure enumeration	names will add
	      the prefixed with	the given value	(regardless of casing).

       EnumIgnoredRegexp
	      Identifier naming	checks won't be	enforced for enumeration names
	      matching this regular expression.

       EnumSuffix
	      When defined, the	check will ensure enumeration names  will  add
	      the suffix with the given	value (regardless of casing).

       For example using values	of:

	   EnumCase of	lower_case

	   EnumPrefix of pre_

	   EnumSuffix of _post

       Identifies and/or transforms enumeration	names as follows:

       Before:

	  enum FOO { One, Two, Three };

       After:

	  enum pre_foo_post { One, Two,	Three };

       EnumConstantCase
	      When  defined,  the check	will ensure enumeration	constant names
	      conform to the selected casing.

       EnumConstantPrefix
	      When defined, the	check will ensure enumeration  constant	 names
	      will  add	 the prefixed with the given value (regardless of cas-
	      ing).

       EnumConstantIgnoredRegexp
	      Identifier naming	checks won't be	enforced for enumeration  con-
	      stant names matching this	regular	expression.

       EnumConstantSuffix
	      When  defined,  the check	will ensure enumeration	constant names
	      will add the suffix with the given value (regardless of casing).

       EnumConstantHungarianPrefix
	      When enabled, the	check ensures  that  the  declared  identifier
	      will  have  a  Hungarian	notation  prefix based on the declared
	      type.

       For example using values	of:

	   EnumConstantCase of	lower_case

	   EnumConstantPrefix of pre_

	   EnumConstantSuffix of _post

	   EnumConstantHungarianPrefix	of On

       Identifies and/or transforms enumeration	constant names as follows:

       Before:

	  enum FOO { One, Two, Three };

       After:

	  enum FOO { pre_One_post, pre_Two_post, pre_Three_post	};

       FunctionCase
	      When defined, the	check will ensure function  names  conform  to
	      the selected casing.

       FunctionPrefix
	      When  defined, the check will ensure function names will add the
	      prefixed with the	given value (regardless	of casing).

       FunctionIgnoredRegexp
	      Identifier naming	checks won't be	enforced  for  function	 names
	      matching this regular expression.

       FunctionSuffix
	      When  defined, the check will ensure function names will add the
	      suffix with the given value (regardless of casing).

       For example using values	of:

	   FunctionCase of lower_case

	   FunctionPrefix of pre_

	   FunctionSuffix of _post

       Identifies and/or transforms function names as follows:

       Before:

	  char MY_Function_string();

       After:

	  char pre_my_function_string_post();

       GetConfigPerFile
	      When true	the check will look for	the configuration for where an
	      identifier is declared. Useful for when  included	 header	 files
	      use a different style.  Default value is true.

       GlobalConstantCase
	      When  defined,  the check	will ensure global constant names con-
	      form to the selected casing.

       GlobalConstantPrefix
	      When defined, the	check will ensure global constant  names  will
	      add the prefixed with the	given value (regardless	of casing).

       GlobalConstantIgnoredRegexp
	      Identifier  naming  checks won't be enforced for global constant
	      names matching this regular expression.

       GlobalConstantSuffix
	      When defined, the	check will ensure global constant  names  will
	      add the suffix with the given value (regardless of casing).

       GlobalConstantHungarianPrefix
	      When  enabled,  the  check  ensures that the declared identifier
	      will have	a Hungarian notation  prefix  based  on	 the  declared
	      type.

       For example using values	of:

	   GlobalConstantCase of lower_case

	   GlobalConstantPrefix of pre_

	   GlobalConstantSuffix of _post

	   GlobalConstantHungarianPrefix of On

       Identifies and/or transforms global constant names as follows:

       Before:

	  unsigned const MyConstGlobal_array[] = {1, 2,	3};

       After:

	  unsigned const pre_myconstglobal_array_post[]	= {1, 2, 3};

       GlobalConstantPointerCase
	      When  defined,  the  check  will	ensure global constant pointer
	      names conform to the selected casing.

       GlobalConstantPointerPrefix
	      When defined, the	check  will  ensure  global  constant  pointer
	      names  will add the prefixed with	the given value	(regardless of
	      casing).

       GlobalConstantPointerIgnoredRegexp
	      Identifier naming	checks won't be	enforced for  global  constant
	      pointer names matching this regular expression.

       GlobalConstantPointerSuffix
	      When  defined,  the  check  will	ensure global constant pointer
	      names will add the suffix	with the given	value  (regardless  of
	      casing).

       GlobalConstantPointerHungarianPrefix
	      When  enabled,  the  check  ensures that the declared identifier
	      will have	a Hungarian notation  prefix  based  on	 the  declared
	      type.

       For example using values	of:

	   GlobalConstantPointerCase of lower_case

	   GlobalConstantPointerPrefix	of pre_

	   GlobalConstantPointerSuffix	of _post

	   GlobalConstantPointerHungarianPrefix of On

       Identifies and/or transforms global constant pointer names as follows:

       Before:

	  int *const MyConstantGlobalPointer = nullptr;

       After:

	  int *const pre_myconstantglobalpointer_post =	nullptr;

       GlobalFunctionCase
	      When  defined,  the check	will ensure global function names con-
	      form to the selected casing.

       GlobalFunctionPrefix
	      When defined, the	check will ensure global function  names  will
	      add the prefixed with the	given value (regardless	of casing).

       GlobalFunctionIgnoredRegexp
	      Identifier  naming  checks won't be enforced for global function
	      names matching this regular expression.

       GlobalFunctionSuffix
	      When defined, the	check will ensure global function  names  will
	      add the suffix with the given value (regardless of casing).

       For example using values	of:

	   GlobalFunctionCase of lower_case

	   GlobalFunctionPrefix of pre_

	   GlobalFunctionSuffix of _post

       Identifies and/or transforms global function names as follows:

       Before:

	  void GLOBAL_FUNCTION(int PARAMETER_1,	int const CONST_parameter);

       After:

	  void pre_global_function_post(int PARAMETER_1, int const CONST_parameter);

       GlobalPointerCase
	      When defined, the	check will ensure global pointer names conform
	      to the selected casing.

       GlobalPointerPrefix
	      When  defined,  the  check will ensure global pointer names will
	      add the prefixed with the	given value (regardless	of casing).

       GlobalPointerIgnoredRegexp
	      Identifier naming	checks won't be	enforced  for  global  pointer
	      names matching this regular expression.

       GlobalPointerSuffix
	      When  defined,  the  check will ensure global pointer names will
	      add the suffix with the given value (regardless of casing).

       GlobalPointerHungarianPrefix
	      When enabled, the	check ensures  that  the  declared  identifier
	      will  have  a  Hungarian	notation  prefix based on the declared
	      type.

       For example using values	of:

	   GlobalPointerCase of lower_case

	   GlobalPointerPrefix	of pre_

	   GlobalPointerSuffix	of _post

	   GlobalPointerHungarianPrefix of On

       Identifies and/or transforms global pointer names as follows:

       Before:

	  int *GLOBAL3;

       After:

	  int *pre_global3_post;

       GlobalVariableCase
	      When defined, the	check will ensure global variable  names  con-
	      form to the selected casing.

       GlobalVariablePrefix
	      When  defined,  the check	will ensure global variable names will
	      add the prefixed with the	given value (regardless	of casing).

       GlobalVariableIgnoredRegexp
	      Identifier naming	checks won't be	enforced for  global  variable
	      names matching this regular expression.

       GlobalVariableSuffix
	      When  defined,  the check	will ensure global variable names will
	      add the suffix with the given value (regardless of casing).

       GlobalVariableHungarianPrefix
	      When enabled, the	check ensures  that  the  declared  identifier
	      will  have  a  Hungarian	notation  prefix based on the declared
	      type.

       For example using values	of:

	   GlobalVariableCase of lower_case

	   GlobalVariablePrefix of pre_

	   GlobalVariableSuffix of _post

	   GlobalVariableHungarianPrefix of On

       Identifies and/or transforms global variable names as follows:

       Before:

	  int GLOBAL3;

       After:

	  int pre_global3_post;

       IgnoreMainLikeFunctions
	      When set to true functions that have a similar signature to main
	      or wmain won't enforce checks on the names of their  parameters.
	      Default value is false.

       InlineNamespaceCase
	      When defined, the	check will ensure inline namespaces names con-
	      form to the selected casing.

       InlineNamespacePrefix
	      When defined, the	check will ensure inline namespaces names will
	      add the prefixed with the	given value (regardless	of casing).

       InlineNamespaceIgnoredRegexp
	      Identifier naming	checks won't be	enforced for inline namespaces
	      names matching this regular expression.

       InlineNamespaceSuffix
	      When defined, the	check will ensure inline namespaces names will
	      add the suffix with the given value (regardless of casing).

       For example using values	of:

	   InlineNamespaceCase	of lower_case

	   InlineNamespacePrefix of pre_

	   InlineNamespaceSuffix of _post

       Identifies and/or transforms inline namespaces names as follows:

       Before:

	  namespace FOO_NS {
	  inline namespace InlineNamespace {
	  ...
	  }
	  } // namespace FOO_NS

       After:

	  namespace FOO_NS {
	  inline namespace pre_inlinenamespace_post {
	  ...
	  }
	  } // namespace FOO_NS

       LocalConstantCase
	      When defined, the	check will ensure local	constant names conform
	      to the selected casing.

       LocalConstantPrefix
	      When  defined,  the  check will ensure local constant names will
	      add the prefixed with the	given value (regardless	of casing).

       LocalConstantIgnoredRegexp
	      Identifier naming	checks won't be	enforced  for  local  constant
	      names matching this regular expression.

       LocalConstantSuffix
	      When  defined,  the  check will ensure local constant names will
	      add the suffix with the given value (regardless of casing).

       LocalConstantHungarianPrefix
	      When enabled, the	check ensures  that  the  declared  identifier
	      will  have  a  Hungarian	notation  prefix based on the declared
	      type.

       For example using values	of:

	   LocalConstantCase of lower_case

	   LocalConstantPrefix	of pre_

	   LocalConstantSuffix	of _post

	   LocalConstantHungarianPrefix of On

       Identifies and/or transforms local constant names as follows:

       Before:

	  void foo() { int const local_Constant	= 3; }

       After:

	  void foo() { int const pre_local_constant_post = 3; }

       LocalConstantPointerCase
	      When defined, the	check will ensure local	constant pointer names
	      conform to the selected casing.

       LocalConstantPointerPrefix
	      When defined, the	check will ensure local	constant pointer names
	      will add the prefixed with the given value (regardless  of  cas-
	      ing).

       LocalConstantPointerIgnoredRegexp
	      Identifier  naming  checks  won't	be enforced for	local constant
	      pointer names matching this regular expression.

       LocalConstantPointerSuffix
	      When defined, the	check will ensure local	constant pointer names
	      will add the suffix with the given value (regardless of casing).

       LocalConstantPointerHungarianPrefix
	      When enabled, the	check ensures  that  the  declared  identifier
	      will  have  a  Hungarian	notation  prefix based on the declared
	      type.

       For example using values	of:

	   LocalConstantPointerCase of	lower_case

	   LocalConstantPointerPrefix of pre_

	   LocalConstantPointerSuffix of _post

	   LocalConstantPointerHungarianPrefix	of On

       Identifies and/or transforms local constant pointer names as follows:

       Before:

	  void foo() { int const *local_Constant = 3; }

       After:

	  void foo() { int const *pre_local_constant_post = 3; }

       LocalPointerCase
	      When defined, the	check will ensure local	pointer	names  conform
	      to the selected casing.

       LocalPointerPrefix
	      When defined, the	check will ensure local	pointer	names will add
	      the prefixed with	the given value	(regardless of casing).

       LocalPointerIgnoredRegexp
	      Identifier  naming  checks  won't	 be enforced for local pointer
	      names matching this regular expression.

       LocalPointerSuffix
	      When defined, the	check will ensure local	pointer	names will add
	      the suffix with the given	value (regardless of casing).

       LocalPointerHungarianPrefix
	      When enabled, the	check ensures  that  the  declared  identifier
	      will  have  a  Hungarian	notation  prefix based on the declared
	      type.

       For example using values	of:

	   LocalPointerCase of	lower_case

	   LocalPointerPrefix of pre_

	   LocalPointerSuffix of _post

	   LocalPointerHungarianPrefix	of On

       Identifies and/or transforms local pointer names	as follows:

       Before:

	  void foo() { int *local_Constant; }

       After:

	  void foo() { int *pre_local_constant_post; }

       LocalVariableCase
	      When defined, the	check will ensure local	variable names conform
	      to the selected casing.

       LocalVariablePrefix
	      When defined, the	check will ensure local	 variable  names  will
	      add the prefixed with the	given value (regardless	of casing).

       LocalVariableIgnoredRegexp
	      Identifier  naming  checks  won't	be enforced for	local variable
	      names matching this regular expression.

       For example using values	of:

	   LocalVariableCase of CamelCase

	   LocalVariableIgnoredRegexp of \w{1,2}

       Will exclude variables with a length less than or equal to 2  from  the
       camel case check	applied	to other variables.

       LocalVariableSuffix
	      When  defined,  the  check will ensure local variable names will
	      add the suffix with the given value (regardless of casing).

       LocalVariableHungarianPrefix
	      When enabled, the	check ensures  that  the  declared  identifier
	      will  have  a  Hungarian	notation  prefix based on the declared
	      type.

       For example using values	of:

	   LocalVariableCase of lower_case

	   LocalVariablePrefix	of pre_

	   LocalVariableSuffix	of _post

	   LocalVariableHungarianPrefix of On

       Identifies and/or transforms local variable names as follows:

       Before:

	  void foo() { int local_Constant; }

       After:

	  void foo() { int pre_local_constant_post; }

       MacroDefinitionCase
	      When defined, the	check will ensure macro	definitions conform to
	      the selected casing.

       MacroDefinitionPrefix
	      When defined, the	check will ensure macro	definitions  will  add
	      the prefixed with	the given value	(regardless of casing).

       MacroDefinitionIgnoredRegexp
	      Identifier naming	checks won't be	enforced for macro definitions
	      matching this regular expression.

       MacroDefinitionSuffix
	      When  defined,  the check	will ensure macro definitions will add
	      the suffix with the given	value (regardless of casing).

       For example using values	of:

	   MacroDefinitionCase	of lower_case

	   MacroDefinitionPrefix of pre_

	   MacroDefinitionSuffix of _post

       Identifies and/or transforms macro definitions as follows:

       Before:

	  #define MY_MacroDefinition

       After:

	  #define pre_my_macro_definition_post

       Note: This will not warn	on builtin macros or  macros  defined  on  the
       command line using the -D flag.

       MemberCase
	      When  defined, the check will ensure member names	conform	to the
	      selected casing.

       MemberPrefix
	      When defined, the	check will ensure member names	will  add  the
	      prefixed with the	given value (regardless	of casing).

       MemberIgnoredRegexp
	      Identifier  naming  checks  won't	 be  enforced for member names
	      matching this regular expression.

       MemberSuffix
	      When defined, the	check will ensure member names	will  add  the
	      suffix with the given value (regardless of casing).

       MemberHungarianPrefix
	      When  enabled,  the  check  ensures that the declared identifier
	      will have	a Hungarian notation  prefix  based  on	 the  declared
	      type.

       For example using values	of:

	   MemberCase of lower_case

	   MemberPrefix of pre_

	   MemberSuffix of _post

	   MemberHungarianPrefix of On

       Identifies and/or transforms member names as follows:

       Before:

	  class	Foo {
	    char MY_ConstMember_string[4];
	  }

       After:

	  class	Foo {
	    char pre_my_constmember_string_post[4];
	  }

       MethodCase
	      When  defined, the check will ensure method names	conform	to the
	      selected casing.

       MethodPrefix
	      When defined, the	check will ensure method names	will  add  the
	      prefixed with the	given value (regardless	of casing).

       MethodIgnoredRegexp
	      Identifier  naming  checks  won't	 be  enforced for method names
	      matching this regular expression.

       MethodSuffix
	      When defined, the	check will ensure method names	will  add  the
	      suffix with the given value (regardless of casing).

       For example using values	of:

	   MethodCase of lower_case

	   MethodPrefix of pre_

	   MethodSuffix of _post

       Identifies and/or transforms method names as follows:

       Before:

	  class	Foo {
	    char MY_Method_string();
	  }

       After:

	  class	Foo {
	    char pre_my_method_string_post();
	  }

       NamespaceCase
	      When  defined,  the check	will ensure namespace names conform to
	      the selected casing.

       NamespacePrefix
	      When defined, the	check will ensure namespace names will add the
	      prefixed with the	given value (regardless	of casing).

       NamespaceIgnoredRegexp
	      Identifier naming	checks won't be	enforced for  namespace	 names
	      matching this regular expression.

       NamespaceSuffix
	      When defined, the	check will ensure namespace names will add the
	      suffix with the given value (regardless of casing).

       For example using values	of:

	   NamespaceCase of lower_case

	   NamespacePrefix of pre_

	   NamespaceSuffix of _post

       Identifies and/or transforms namespace names as follows:

       Before:

	  namespace FOO_NS {
	  ...
	  }

       After:

	  namespace pre_foo_ns_post {
	  ...
	  }

       ParameterCase
	      When  defined,  the check	will ensure parameter names conform to
	      the selected casing.

       ParameterPrefix
	      When defined, the	check will ensure parameter names will add the
	      prefixed with the	given value (regardless	of casing).

       ParameterIgnoredRegexp
	      Identifier naming	checks won't be	enforced for  parameter	 names
	      matching this regular expression.

       ParameterSuffix
	      When defined, the	check will ensure parameter names will add the
	      suffix with the given value (regardless of casing).

       ParameterHungarianPrefix
	      When  enabled,  the  check  ensures that the declared identifier
	      will have	a Hungarian notation  prefix  based  on	 the  declared
	      type.

       For example using values	of:

	   ParameterCase of lower_case

	   ParameterPrefix of pre_

	   ParameterSuffix of _post

	   ParameterHungarianPrefix of	On

       Identifies and/or transforms parameter names as follows:

       Before:

	  void GLOBAL_FUNCTION(int PARAMETER_1,	int const CONST_parameter);

       After:

	  void GLOBAL_FUNCTION(int pre_parameter_post, int const CONST_parameter);

       ParameterPackCase
	      When defined, the	check will ensure parameter pack names conform
	      to the selected casing.

       ParameterPackPrefix
	      When  defined,  the  check will ensure parameter pack names will
	      add the prefixed with the	given value (regardless	of casing).

       ParameterPackIgnoredRegexp
	      Identifier naming	checks won't be	enforced  for  parameter  pack
	      names matching this regular expression.

       ParameterPackSuffix
	      When  defined,  the  check will ensure parameter pack names will
	      add the suffix with the given value (regardless of casing).

       For example using values	of:

	   ParameterPackCase of lower_case

	   ParameterPackPrefix	of pre_

	   ParameterPackSuffix	of _post

       Identifies and/or transforms parameter pack names as follows:

       Before:

	  template <typename...	TYPE_parameters> {
	    void FUNCTION(int... TYPE_parameters);
	  }

       After:

	  template <typename...	TYPE_parameters> {
	    void FUNCTION(int... pre_type_parameters_post);
	  }

       PointerParameterCase
	      When defined, the	check will ensure pointer parameter names con-
	      form to the selected casing.

       PointerParameterPrefix
	      When defined, the	check will ensure pointer parameter names will
	      add the prefixed with the	given value (regardless	of casing).

       PointerParameterIgnoredRegexp
	      Identifier naming	checks won't be	enforced for pointer parameter
	      names matching this regular expression.

       PointerParameterSuffix
	      When defined, the	check will ensure pointer parameter names will
	      add the suffix with the given value (regardless of casing).

       PointerParameterHungarianPrefix
	      When enabled, the	check ensures  that  the  declared  identifier
	      will  have  a  Hungarian	notation  prefix based on the declared
	      type.

       For example using values	of:

	   PointerParameterCase of lower_case

	   PointerParameterPrefix of pre_

	   PointerParameterSuffix of _post

	   PointerParameterHungarianPrefix of On

       Identifies and/or transforms pointer parameter names as follows:

       Before:

	  void FUNCTION(int *PARAMETER);

       After:

	  void FUNCTION(int *pre_parameter_post);

       PrivateMemberCase
	      When defined, the	check will ensure private member names conform
	      to the selected casing.

       PrivateMemberPrefix
	      When defined, the	check will ensure private  member  names  will
	      add the prefixed with the	given value (regardless	of casing).

       PrivateMemberIgnoredRegexp
	      Identifier  naming  checks  won't	be enforced for	private	member
	      names matching this regular expression.

       PrivateMemberSuffix
	      When defined, the	check will ensure private  member  names  will
	      add the suffix with the given value (regardless of casing).

       PrivateMemberHungarianPrefix
	      When  enabled,  the  check  ensures that the declared identifier
	      will have	a Hungarian notation  prefix  based  on	 the  declared
	      type.

       For example using values	of:

	   PrivateMemberCase of lower_case

	   PrivateMemberPrefix	of pre_

	   PrivateMemberSuffix	of _post

	   PrivateMemberHungarianPrefix of On

       Identifies and/or transforms private member names as follows:

       Before:

	  class	Foo {
	  private:
	    int	Member_Variable;
	  }

       After:

	  class	Foo {
	  private:
	    int	pre_member_variable_post;
	  }

       PrivateMethodCase
	      When defined, the	check will ensure private method names conform
	      to the selected casing.

       PrivateMethodPrefix
	      When  defined,  the  check will ensure private method names will
	      add the prefixed with the	given value (regardless	of casing).

       PrivateMethodIgnoredRegexp
	      Identifier naming	checks won't be	enforced  for  private	method
	      names matching this regular expression.

       PrivateMethodSuffix
	      When  defined,  the  check will ensure private method names will
	      add the suffix with the given value (regardless of casing).

       For example using values	of:

	   PrivateMethodCase of lower_case

	   PrivateMethodPrefix	of pre_

	   PrivateMethodSuffix	of _post

       Identifies and/or transforms private method names as follows:

       Before:

	  class	Foo {
	  private:
	    int	Member_Method();
	  }

       After:

	  class	Foo {
	  private:
	    int	pre_member_method_post();
	  }

       ProtectedMemberCase
	      When defined, the	check will ensure protected member names  con-
	      form to the selected casing.

       ProtectedMemberPrefix
	      When  defined, the check will ensure protected member names will
	      add the prefixed with the	given value (regardless	of casing).

       ProtectedMemberIgnoredRegexp
	      Identifier naming	checks won't be	enforced for protected	member
	      names matching this regular expression.

       ProtectedMemberSuffix
	      When  defined, the check will ensure protected member names will
	      add the suffix with the given value (regardless of casing).

       ProtectedMemberHungarianPrefix
	      When enabled, the	check ensures  that  the  declared  identifier
	      will  have  a  Hungarian	notation  prefix based on the declared
	      type.

       For example using values	of:

	   ProtectedMemberCase	of lower_case

	   ProtectedMemberPrefix of pre_

	   ProtectedMemberSuffix of _post

	   ProtectedMemberHungarianPrefix of On

       Identifies and/or transforms protected member names as follows:

       Before:

	  class	Foo {
	  protected:
	    int	Member_Variable;
	  }

       After:

	  class	Foo {
	  protected:
	    int	pre_member_variable_post;
	  }

       ProtectedMethodCase
	      When defined, the	check will ensure protected method names  con-
	      form to the selected casing.

       ProtectedMethodPrefix
	      When  defined, the check will ensure protected method names will
	      add the prefixed with the	given value (regardless	of casing).

       ProtectedMethodIgnoredRegexp
	      Identifier naming	checks won't be	enforced for protected	method
	      names matching this regular expression.

       ProtectedMethodSuffix
	      When  defined, the check will ensure protected method names will
	      add the suffix with the given value (regardless of casing).

       For example using values	of:

	   ProtectedMethodCase	of lower_case

	   ProtectedMethodPrefix of pre_

	   ProtectedMethodSuffix of _post

       Identifies and/or transforms protect method names as follows:

       Before:

	  class	Foo {
	  protected:
	    int	Member_Method();
	  }

       After:

	  class	Foo {
	  protected:
	    int	pre_member_method_post();
	  }

       PublicMemberCase
	      When defined, the	check will ensure public member	names  conform
	      to the selected casing.

       PublicMemberPrefix
	      When defined, the	check will ensure public member	names will add
	      the prefixed with	the given value	(regardless of casing).

       PublicMemberIgnoredRegexp
	      Identifier  naming  checks  won't	 be enforced for public	member
	      names matching this regular expression.

       PublicMemberSuffix
	      When defined, the	check will ensure public member	names will add
	      the suffix with the given	value (regardless of casing).

       PublicMemberHungarianPrefix
	      When enabled, the	check ensures  that  the  declared  identifier
	      will  have  a  Hungarian	notation  prefix based on the declared
	      type.

       For example using values	of:

	   PublicMemberCase of	lower_case

	   PublicMemberPrefix of pre_

	   PublicMemberSuffix of _post

	   PublicMemberHungarianPrefix	of On

       Identifies and/or transforms public member names	as follows:

       Before:

	  class	Foo {
	  public:
	    int	Member_Variable;
	  }

       After:

	  class	Foo {
	  public:
	    int	pre_member_variable_post;
	  }

       PublicMethodCase
	      When defined, the	check will ensure public method	names  conform
	      to the selected casing.

       PublicMethodPrefix
	      When defined, the	check will ensure public method	names will add
	      the prefixed with	the given value	(regardless of casing).

       PublicMethodIgnoredRegexp
	      Identifier  naming  checks  won't	 be enforced for public	method
	      names matching this regular expression.

       PublicMethodSuffix
	      When defined, the	check will ensure public method	names will add
	      the suffix with the given	value (regardless of casing).

       For example using values	of:

	   PublicMethodCase of	lower_case

	   PublicMethodPrefix of pre_

	   PublicMethodSuffix of _post

       Identifies and/or transforms public method names	as follows:

       Before:

	  class	Foo {
	  public:
	    int	Member_Method();
	  }

       After:

	  class	Foo {
	  public:
	    int	pre_member_method_post();
	  }

       ScopedEnumConstantCase
	      When defined, the	check will ensure scoped enum  constant	 names
	      conform to the selected casing.

       ScopedEnumConstantPrefix
	      When  defined,  the check	will ensure scoped enum	constant names
	      will add the prefixed with the given value (regardless  of  cas-
	      ing).

       ScopedEnumConstantIgnoredRegexp
	      Identifier  naming checks	won't be enforced for scoped enum con-
	      stant names matching this	regular	expression.

       ScopedEnumConstantSuffix
	      When defined, the	check will ensure scoped enum  constant	 names
	      will add the suffix with the given value (regardless of casing).

       ScopedEnumConstantHungarianPrefix
	      When  enabled,  the  check  ensures that the declared identifier
	      will have	a Hungarian notation  prefix  based  on	 the  declared
	      type.

       For example using values	of:

	   ScopedEnumConstantCase of lower_case

	   ScopedEnumConstantPrefix of	pre_

	   ScopedEnumConstantSuffix of	_post

	   ScopedEnumConstantHungarianPrefix of On

       Identifies and/or transforms enumeration	constant names as follows:

       Before:

	  enum class FOO { One,	Two, Three };

       After:

	  enum class FOO { pre_One_post, pre_Two_post, pre_Three_post };

       StaticConstantCase
	      When  defined,  the check	will ensure static constant names con-
	      form to the selected casing.

       StaticConstantPrefix
	      When defined, the	check will ensure static constant  names  will
	      add the prefixed with the	given value (regardless	of casing).

       StaticConstantIgnoredRegexp
	      Identifier  naming  checks won't be enforced for static constant
	      names matching this regular expression.

       StaticConstantSuffix
	      When defined, the	check will ensure static constant  names  will
	      add the suffix with the given value (regardless of casing).

       StaticConstantHungarianPrefix
	      When  enabled,  the  check  ensures that the declared identifier
	      will have	a Hungarian notation  prefix  based  on	 the  declared
	      type.

       For example using values	of:

	   StaticConstantCase of lower_case

	   StaticConstantPrefix of pre_

	   StaticConstantSuffix of _post

	   StaticConstantHungarianPrefix of On

       Identifies and/or transforms static constant names as follows:

       Before:

	  static unsigned const	MyConstStatic_array[] =	{1, 2, 3};

       After:

	  static unsigned const	pre_myconststatic_array_post[] = {1, 2,	3};

       StaticVariableCase
	      When  defined,  the check	will ensure static variable names con-
	      form to the selected casing.

       StaticVariablePrefix
	      When defined, the	check will ensure static variable  names  will
	      add the prefixed with the	given value (regardless	of casing).

       StaticVariableIgnoredRegexp
	      Identifier  naming  checks won't be enforced for static variable
	      names matching this regular expression.

       StaticVariableSuffix
	      When defined, the	check will ensure static variable  names  will
	      add the suffix with the given value (regardless of casing).

       StaticVariableHungarianPrefix
	      When  enabled,  the  check  ensures that the declared identifier
	      will have	a Hungarian notation  prefix  based  on	 the  declared
	      type.

       For example using values	of:

	   StaticVariableCase of lower_case

	   StaticVariablePrefix of pre_

	   StaticVariableSuffix of _post

	   StaticVariableHungarianPrefix of On

       Identifies and/or transforms static variable names as follows:

       Before:

	  static unsigned MyStatic_array[] = {1, 2, 3};

       After:

	  static unsigned pre_mystatic_array_post[] = {1, 2, 3};

       StructCase
	      When  defined, the check will ensure struct names	conform	to the
	      selected casing.

       StructPrefix
	      When defined, the	check will ensure struct names	will  add  the
	      prefixed with the	given value (regardless	of casing).

       StructIgnoredRegexp
	      Identifier  naming  checks  won't	 be  enforced for struct names
	      matching this regular expression.

       StructSuffix
	      When defined, the	check will ensure struct names	will  add  the
	      suffix with the given value (regardless of casing).

       For example using values	of:

	   StructCase of lower_case

	   StructPrefix of pre_

	   StructSuffix of _post

       Identifies and/or transforms struct names as follows:

       Before:

	  struct FOO {
	    FOO();
	    ~FOO();
	  };

       After:

	  struct pre_foo_post {
	    pre_foo_post();
	    ~pre_foo_post();
	  };

       TemplateParameterCase
	      When  defined,  the  check  will ensure template parameter names
	      conform to the selected casing.

       TemplateParameterPrefix
	      When defined, the	check will  ensure  template  parameter	 names
	      will  add	 the prefixed with the given value (regardless of cas-
	      ing).

       TemplateParameterIgnoredRegexp
	      Identifier naming	checks won't be	enforced for template  parame-
	      ter names	matching this regular expression.

       TemplateParameterSuffix
	      When  defined,  the  check  will ensure template parameter names
	      will add the suffix with the given value (regardless of casing).

       For example using values	of:

	   TemplateParameterCase of lower_case

	   TemplateParameterPrefix of pre_

	   TemplateParameterSuffix of _post

       Identifies and/or transforms template parameter names as	follows:

       Before:

	  template <typename T>	class Foo {};

       After:

	  template <typename pre_t_post> class Foo {};

       TemplateTemplateParameterCase
	      When defined, the	check will ensure template template  parameter
	      names conform to the selected casing.

       TemplateTemplateParameterPrefix
	      When  defined, the check will ensure template template parameter
	      names will add the prefixed with the given value (regardless  of
	      casing).

       TemplateTemplateParameterIgnoredRegexp
	      Identifier naming	checks won't be	enforced for template template
	      parameter	names matching this regular expression.

       TemplateTemplateParameterSuffix
	      When  defined, the check will ensure template template parameter
	      names will add the suffix	with the given	value  (regardless  of
	      casing).

       For example using values	of:

	   TemplateTemplateParameterCase of lower_case

	   TemplateTemplateParameterPrefix of pre_

	   TemplateTemplateParameterSuffix of _post

       Identifies  and/or transforms template template parameter names as fol-
       lows:

       Before:

	  template <template <typename>	class TPL_parameter, int COUNT_params,
		    typename...	TYPE_parameters>

       After:

	  template <template <typename>	class pre_tpl_parameter_post, int COUNT_params,
		    typename...	TYPE_parameters>

       TypeAliasCase
	      When defined, the	check will ensure type alias names conform  to
	      the selected casing.

       TypeAliasPrefix
	      When  defined,  the  check will ensure type alias	names will add
	      the prefixed with	the given value	(regardless of casing).

       TypeAliasIgnoredRegexp
	      Identifier naming	checks won't be	enforced for type alias	 names
	      matching this regular expression.

       TypeAliasSuffix
	      When  defined,  the  check will ensure type alias	names will add
	      the suffix with the given	value (regardless of casing).

       For example using values	of:

	   TypeAliasCase of lower_case

	   TypeAliasPrefix of pre_

	   TypeAliasSuffix of _post

       Identifies and/or transforms type alias names as	follows:

       Before:

	  using	MY_STRUCT_TYPE = my_structure;

       After:

	  using	pre_my_struct_type_post	= my_structure;

       TypedefCase
	      When defined, the	check will ensure typedef names	conform	to the
	      selected casing.

       TypedefPrefix
	      When defined, the	check will ensure typedef names	will  add  the
	      prefixed with the	given value (regardless	of casing).

       TypedefIgnoredRegexp
	      Identifier  naming  checks  won't	 be enforced for typedef names
	      matching this regular expression.

       TypedefSuffix
	      When defined, the	check will ensure typedef names	will  add  the
	      suffix with the given value (regardless of casing).

       For example using values	of:

	   TypedefCase	of lower_case

	   TypedefPrefix of pre_

	   TypedefSuffix of _post

       Identifies and/or transforms typedef names as follows:

       Before:

	  typedef int MYINT;

       After:

	  typedef int pre_myint_post;

       TypeTemplateParameterCase
	      When  defined,  the  check  will	ensure type template parameter
	      names conform to the selected casing.

       TypeTemplateParameterPrefix
	      When defined, the	check  will  ensure  type  template  parameter
	      names  will add the prefixed with	the given value	(regardless of
	      casing).

       TypeTemplateParameterIgnoredRegexp
	      Identifier naming	checks won't be	 enforced  for	type  template
	      names matching this regular expression.

       TypeTemplateParameterSuffix
	      When  defined,  the  check  will	ensure type template parameter
	      names will add the suffix	with the given	value  (regardless  of
	      casing).

       For example using values	of:

	   TypeTemplateParameterCase of lower_case

	   TypeTemplateParameterPrefix	of pre_

	   TypeTemplateParameterSuffix	of _post

       Identifies and/or transforms type template parameter names as follows:

       Before:

	  template <template <typename>	class TPL_parameter, int COUNT_params,
		    typename...	TYPE_parameters>

       After:

	  template <template <typename>	class TPL_parameter, int COUNT_params,
		    typename...	pre_type_parameters_post>

       UnionCase
	      When  defined,  the check	will ensure union names	conform	to the
	      selected casing.

       UnionPrefix
	      When defined, the	check will ensure union	 names	will  add  the
	      prefixed with the	given value (regardless	of casing).

       UnionIgnoredRegexp
	      Identifier  naming  checks  won't	 be  enforced  for union names
	      matching this regular expression.

       UnionSuffix
	      When defined, the	check will ensure union	 names	will  add  the
	      suffix with the given value (regardless of casing).

       For example using values	of:

	   UnionCase of lower_case

	   UnionPrefix	of pre_

	   UnionSuffix	of _post

       Identifies and/or transforms union names	as follows:

       Before:

	  union	FOO {
	    int	a;
	    char b;
	  };

       After:

	  union	pre_foo_post {
	    int	a;
	    char b;
	  };

       ValueTemplateParameterCase
	      When  defined,  the  check  will ensure value template parameter
	      names conform to the selected casing.

       ValueTemplateParameterPrefix
	      When defined, the	check will  ensure  value  template  parameter
	      names  will add the prefixed with	the given value	(regardless of
	      casing).

       ValueTemplateParameterIgnoredRegexp
	      Identifier naming	checks won't be	enforced  for  value  template
	      parameter	names matching this regular expression.

       ValueTemplateParameterSuffix
	      When  defined,  the  check  will ensure value template parameter
	      names will add the suffix	with the given	value  (regardless  of
	      casing).

       For example using values	of:

	   ValueTemplateParameterCase of lower_case

	   ValueTemplateParameterPrefix of pre_

	   ValueTemplateParameterSuffix of _post

       Identifies and/or transforms value template parameter names as follows:

       Before:

	  template <template <typename>	class TPL_parameter, int COUNT_params,
		    typename...	TYPE_parameters>

       After:

	  template <template <typename>	class TPL_parameter, int pre_count_params_post,
		    typename...	TYPE_parameters>

       VariableCase
	      When  defined,  the  check will ensure variable names conform to
	      the selected casing.

       VariablePrefix
	      When defined, the	check will ensure variable names will add  the
	      prefixed with the	given value (regardless	of casing).

       VariableIgnoredRegexp
	      Identifier  naming  checks  won't	be enforced for	variable names
	      matching this regular expression.

       VariableSuffix
	      When defined, the	check will ensure variable names will add  the
	      suffix with the given value (regardless of casing).

       VariableHungarianPrefix
	      When  enabled,  the  check  ensures that the declared identifier
	      will have	a Hungarian notation  prefix  based  on	 the  declared
	      type.

       For example using values	of:

	   VariableCase of lower_case

	   VariablePrefix of pre_

	   VariableSuffix of _post

	   VariableHungarianPrefix of On

       Identifies and/or transforms variable names as follows:

       Before:

	  unsigned MyVariable;

       After:

	  unsigned pre_myvariable_post;

       VirtualMethodCase
	      When defined, the	check will ensure virtual method names conform
	      to the selected casing.

       VirtualMethodPrefix
	      When  defined,  the  check will ensure virtual method names will
	      add the prefixed with the	given value (regardless	of casing).

       VirtualMethodIgnoredRegexp
	      Identifier naming	checks won't be	enforced  for  virtual	method
	      names matching this regular expression.

       VirtualMethodSuffix
	      When  defined,  the  check will ensure virtual method names will
	      add the suffix with the given value (regardless of casing).

       For example using values	of:

	   VirtualMethodCase of lower_case

	   VirtualMethodPrefix	of pre_

	   VirtualMethodSuffix	of _post

       Identifies and/or transforms virtual method names as follows:

       Before:

	  class	Foo {
	  public:
	    virtual int	MemberFunction();
	  }

       After:

	  class	Foo {
	  public:
	    virtual int	pre_member_function_post();
	  }

   The default mapping table of	Hungarian Notation
       In  Hungarian  notation,	 a  variable  name  starts  with  a  group  of
       lower-case  letters which are mnemonics for the type or purpose of that
       variable, followed by whatever name the	programmer  has	 chosen;  this
       last part is sometimes distinguished as the given name. The first char-
       acter of	the given name can be capitalized to separate it from the type
       indicators  (see	also CamelCase).  Otherwise the	case of	this character
       denotes scope.

       The following table is the default mapping table	of Hungarian  Notation
       which  maps Decl	to its prefix string. You can also have	your own style
       in config file.
      +-------------+------------+-------------+--------+-----------+--------+
      |	Primitive   | Microsoft	 |	       |	|	    |	     |
      |	Types	    | data types |	       |	|	    |	     |
      +-------------+------------+-------------+--------+-----------+--------+
      |	Type	    | Prefix	 | Type	       | Prefix	| Type	    | Prefix |
      +-------------+------------+-------------+--------+-----------+--------+
      |	int8_t	    | i8	 | signed int  | si	| BOOL	    | b	     |
      +-------------+------------+-------------+--------+-----------+--------+
      |	int16_t	    | i16	 | signed      | ss	| BOOLEAN   | b	     |
      |		    |		 | short       |	|	    |	     |
      +-------------+------------+-------------+--------+-----------+--------+
      |	int32_t	    | i32	 | signed      | ssi	| BYTE	    | by     |
      |		    |		 | short int   |	|	    |	     |
      +-------------+------------+-------------+--------+-----------+--------+
      |	int64_t	    | i64	 | signed long | slli	| CHAR	    | c	     |
      |		    |		 | long	int    |	|	    |	     |
      +-------------+------------+-------------+--------+-----------+--------+
      |	uint8_t	    | u8	 | signed long | sll	| UCHAR	    | uc     |
      |		    |		 | long	       |	|	    |	     |
      +-------------+------------+-------------+--------+-----------+--------+
      |	uint16_t    | u16	 | signed long | sli	| SHORT	    | s	     |
      |		    |		 | int	       |	|	    |	     |
      +-------------+------------+-------------+--------+-----------+--------+
      |	uint32_t    | u32	 | signed long | sl	| USHORT    | us     |
      +-------------+------------+-------------+--------+-----------+--------+
      |	uint64_t    | u64	 | signed      | s	| WORD	    | w	     |
      +-------------+------------+-------------+--------+-----------+--------+
      |	char8_t	    | c8	 | unsigned    | ulli	| DWORD	    | dw     |
      |		    |		 | long	  long |	|	    |	     |
      |		    |		 | int	       |	|	    |	     |
      +-------------+------------+-------------+--------+-----------+--------+
      |	char16_t    | c16	 | unsigned    | ull	| DWORD32   | dw32   |
      |		    |		 | long	long   |	|	    |	     |
      +-------------+------------+-------------+--------+-----------+--------+
      |	char32_t    | c32	 | unsigned    | uli	| DWORD64   | dw64   |
      |		    |		 | long	int    |	|	    |	     |
      +-------------+------------+-------------+--------+-----------+--------+
      |	float	    | f		 | unsigned    | ul	| LONG	    | l	     |
      |		    |		 | long	       |	|	    |	     |
      +-------------+------------+-------------+--------+-----------+--------+
      |	double	    | d		 | unsigned    | usi	| ULONG	    | ul     |
      |		    |		 | short int   |	|	    |	     |
      +-------------+------------+-------------+--------+-----------+--------+
      |	char	    | c		 | unsigned    | us	| ULONG32   | ul32   |
      |		    |		 | short       |	|	    |	     |
      +-------------+------------+-------------+--------+-----------+--------+
      |	bool	    | b		 | unsigned    | ui	| ULONG64   | ul64   |
      |		    |		 | int	       |	|	    |	     |
      +-------------+------------+-------------+--------+-----------+--------+
      |	_Bool	    | b		 | unsigned    | u	| ULONGLONG | ull    |
      +-------------+------------+-------------+--------+-----------+--------+
      |	int	    | i		 | long	  long | lli	| HANDLE    | h	     |
      |		    |		 | int	       |	|	    |	     |
      +-------------+------------+-------------+--------+-----------+--------+
      |	size_t	    | n		 | long	double | ld	| INT	    | i	     |
      +-------------+------------+-------------+--------+-----------+--------+
      |	short	    | s		 | long	long   | ll	| INT8	    | i8     |
      +-------------+------------+-------------+--------+-----------+--------+
      |	signed	    | i		 | long	int    | li	| INT16	    | i16    |
      +-------------+------------+-------------+--------+-----------+--------+
      |	unsigned    | u		 | long	       | l	| INT32	    | i32    |
      +-------------+------------+-------------+--------+-----------+--------+
      |	long	    | l		 | ptrdiff_t   | p	| INT64	    | i64    |
      +-------------+------------+-------------+--------+-----------+--------+
      |	long long   | ll	 |	       |	| UINT	    | ui     |
      +-------------+------------+-------------+--------+-----------+--------+
      |	unsigned    | ul	 |	       |	| UINT8	    | u8     |
      |	long	    |		 |	       |	|	    |	     |
      +-------------+------------+-------------+--------+-----------+--------+
      |	long double | ld	 |	       |	| UINT16    | u16    |
      +-------------+------------+-------------+--------+-----------+--------+
      |	ptrdiff_t   | p		 |	       |	| UINT32    | u32    |
      +-------------+------------+-------------+--------+-----------+--------+
      |	wchar_t	    | wc	 |	       |	| UINT64    | u64    |
      +-------------+------------+-------------+--------+-----------+--------+
      |	short int   | si	 |	       |	| PVOID	    | p	     |
      +-------------+------------+-------------+--------+-----------+--------+
      |	short	    | s		 |	       |	|	    |	     |
      +-------------+------------+-------------+--------+-----------+--------+

       There are more trivial options for Hungarian Notation:

       HungarianNotation.General.*
	      Options are not belonging	to any specific	Decl.

       HungarianNotation.CString.*
	      Options for NULL-terminated string.

       HungarianNotation.DerivedType.*
	      Options for derived types.

       HungarianNotation.PrimitiveType.*
	      Options for primitive types.

       HungarianNotation.UserDefinedType.*
	      Options for user-defined types.

   Options for Hungarian Notation
        HungarianNotation.General.TreatStructAsClass

        HungarianNotation.DerivedType.Array

        HungarianNotation.DerivedType.Pointer

        HungarianNotation.DerivedType.FunctionPointer

        HungarianNotation.CString.CharPrinter

        HungarianNotation.CString.CharArray

        HungarianNotation.CString.WideCharPrinter

        HungarianNotation.CString.WideCharArray

        HungarianNotation.PrimitiveType.*

        HungarianNotation.UserDefinedType.*

       HungarianNotation.General.TreatStructAsClass
	      When defined, the	check will treat naming	of struct as a	class.
	      The default value	is false.

       HungarianNotation.DerivedType.Array
	      When  defined,  the check	will ensure variable name will add the
	      prefix with the given string. The	default	prefix is a.

       HungarianNotation.DerivedType.Pointer
	      When defined, the	check will ensure variable name	will  add  the
	      prefix with the given string. The	default	prefix is p.

       HungarianNotation.DerivedType.FunctionPointer
	      When  defined,  the check	will ensure variable name will add the
	      prefix with the given string. The	default	prefix is fn.

       Before:

	  // Array
	  int DataArray[2] = {0};

	  // Pointer
	  void *DataBuffer = NULL;

	  // FunctionPointer
	  typedef void (*FUNC_PTR)();
	  FUNC_PTR FuncPtr = NULL;

       After:

	  // Array
	  int aDataArray[2] = {0};

	  // Pointer
	  void *pDataBuffer = NULL;

	  // FunctionPointer
	  typedef void (*FUNC_PTR)();
	  FUNC_PTR fnFuncPtr = NULL;

       HungarianNotation.CString.CharPrinter
	      When defined, the	check will ensure variable name	will  add  the
	      prefix with the given string. The	default	prefix is sz.

       HungarianNotation.CString.CharArray
	      When  defined,  the check	will ensure variable name will add the
	      prefix with the given string. The	default	prefix is sz.

       HungarianNotation.CString.WideCharPrinter
	      When defined, the	check will ensure variable name	will  add  the
	      prefix with the given string. The	default	prefix is wsz.

       HungarianNotation.CString.WideCharArray
	      When  defined,  the check	will ensure variable name will add the
	      prefix with the given string. The	default	prefix is wsz.

       Before:

	  // CharPrinter
	  const	char *NamePtr =	"Name";

	  // CharArray
	  const	char NameArray[] = "Name";

	  // WideCharPrinter
	  const	wchar_t	*WideNamePtr = L"Name";

	  // WideCharArray
	  const	wchar_t	WideNameArray[]	= L"Name";

       After:

	  // CharPrinter
	  const	char *szNamePtr	= "Name";

	  // CharArray
	  const	char szNameArray[] = "Name";

	  // WideCharPrinter
	  const	wchar_t	*wszWideNamePtr	= L"Name";

	  // WideCharArray
	  const	wchar_t	wszWideNameArray[] = L"Name";

       HungarianNotation.PrimitiveType.*
	      When defined, the	check will ensure variable  name  of  involved
	      primitive	 types	will add the prefix with the given string. The
	      default prefixes are defined in the default mapping table.

       HungarianNotation.UserDefinedType.*
	      When defined, the	check will ensure variable  name  of  involved
	      primitive	 types	will add the prefix with the given string. The
	      default prefixes are defined in the default mapping table.

       Before:

	  int8_t   ValueI8	= 0;
	  int16_t  ValueI16	= 0;
	  int32_t  ValueI32	= 0;
	  int64_t  ValueI64	= 0;
	  uint8_t  ValueU8	= 0;
	  uint16_t ValueU16	= 0;
	  uint32_t ValueU32	= 0;
	  uint64_t ValueU64	= 0;
	  float	   ValueFloat	= 0.0;
	  double   ValueDouble	= 0.0;
	  ULONG	   ValueUlong	= 0;
	  DWORD	   ValueDword	= 0;

       After:

	  int8_t   i8ValueI8	= 0;
	  int16_t  i16ValueI16	= 0;
	  int32_t  i32ValueI32	= 0;
	  int64_t  i64ValueI64	= 0;
	  uint8_t  u8ValueU8	= 0;
	  uint16_t u16ValueU16	= 0;
	  uint32_t u32ValueU32	= 0;
	  uint64_t u64ValueU64	= 0;
	  float	   fValueFloat	= 0.0;
	  double   dValueDouble	= 0.0;
	  ULONG	   ulValueUlong	= 0;
	  DWORD	   dwValueDword	= 0;

   readability-implicit-bool-cast
       This check has been renamed to readability-implicit-bool-conversion.

   readability-implicit-bool-conversion
       This check can be used to find implicit	conversions  between  built-in
       types  and  booleans.  Depending	 on  use case, it may simply help with
       readability of the code,	or in some  cases,  point  to  potential  bugs
       which remain unnoticed due to implicit conversions.

       The  following  is  a real-world	example	of bug which was hiding	behind
       implicit	bool conversion:

	  class	Foo {
	    int	m_foo;

	  public:
	    void setFoo(bool foo) { m_foo = foo; } // warning: implicit	conversion bool	-> int
	    int	getFoo() { return m_foo; }
	  };

	  void use(Foo&	foo) {
	    bool value = foo.getFoo(); // warning: implicit conversion int -> bool
	  }

       This code is the	result of  unsuccessful	 refactoring,  where  type  of
       m_foo changed from bool to int. The programmer forgot to	change all oc-
       currences  of bool, and the remaining code is no	longer correct,	yet it
       still compiles without any visible warnings.

       In addition to issuing warnings,	fix-it	hints  are  provided  to  help
       solve  the  reported issues. This can be	used for improving readability
       of code,	for example:

	  void conversionsToBool() {
	    float floating;
	    bool boolean = floating;
	    // ^ propose replacement: bool boolean = floating != 0.0f;

	    int	integer;
	    if (integer) {}
	    // ^ propose replacement: if (integer != 0)	{}

	    int* pointer;
	    if (!pointer) {}
	    // ^ propose replacement: if (pointer == nullptr) {}

	    while (1) {}
	    // ^ propose replacement: while (true) {}
	  }

	  void functionTakingInt(int param);

	  void conversionsFromBool() {
	    bool boolean;
	    functionTakingInt(boolean);
	    // ^ propose replacement: functionTakingInt(static_cast<int>(boolean));

	    functionTakingInt(true);
	    // ^ propose replacement: functionTakingInt(1);
	  }

       In general, the following conversion types are checked:

        integer expression/literal to boolean (conversion from	a  single  bit
	 bitfield to boolean is	explicitly allowed, since there's no ambiguity
	 / information loss in this case),

        floating expression/literal to	boolean,

        pointer/pointer to member/nullptr/NULL	to boolean,

        boolean  expression/literal  to integer (conversion from boolean to a
	 single	bit bitfield is	explicitly allowed),

        boolean expression/literal to floating.

       The rules for generating	fix-it hints are:

        in case of conversions	from other built-in type to bool, an  explicit
	 comparison  is	 proposed  to make it clear what exactly is being com-
	 pared:

	  bool	boolean	= floating; is changed to bool boolean =  floating  ==
	   0.0f;,

	  for	other  types, appropriate literals are used (0,	0u, 0.0f, 0.0,
	   nullptr),

        in case of negated expressions	conversion to bool, the	 proposed  re-
	 placement with	comparison is simplified:

	  if (!pointer) is changed to if (pointer == nullptr),

        in case of conversions	from bool to other built-in types, an explicit
	 static_cast  is proposed to make it clear that	a conversion is	taking
	 place:

	  int	integer	 =  boolean;  is  changed  to  int  integer   =	  sta-
	   tic_cast<int>(boolean);,

        if  the  conversion is	performed on type literals, an equivalent lit-
	 eral is proposed, according to	what type is  actually	expected,  for
	 example:

	  functionTakingBool(0); is changed to	functionTakingBool(false);,

	  functionTakingInt(true); is changed to functionTakingInt(1);,

	  for	other types, appropriate literals are used (false, true, 0, 1,
	   0u, 1u, 0.0f, 1.0f, 0.0, 1.0f).

       Some additional accommodations are made for pre-C++11 dialects:

        false literal conversion to pointer is	detected,

        instead of nullptr literal, 0 is proposed as replacement.

       Occurrences of implicit conversions inside macros and template  instan-
       tiations	 are deliberately ignored, as it is not	clear how to deal with
       such cases.

   Options
       AllowIntegerConditions
	      When true, the check will	allow conditional integer conversions.
	      Default is false.

       AllowPointerConditions
	      When true, the check will	allow conditional pointer conversions.
	      Default is false.

   readability-inconsistent-declaration-parameter-name
       Find function declarations which	differ in parameter names.

       Example:

	  // in	foo.hpp:
	  void foo(int a, int b, int c);

	  // in	foo.cpp:
	  void foo(int d, int e, int f); // warning

       This check should help to enforce consistency in	large projects,	 where
       it  often happens that a	definition of function is refactored, changing
       the parameter names, but	its declaration	in header file is not updated.
       With this check,	we can easily find and correct	such  inconsistencies,
       keeping declaration and definition always in sync.

       Unnamed parameters are allowed and are not taken	into account when com-
       paring function declarations, for example:

	  void foo(int a);
	  void foo(int); // no warning

       One  name is also allowed to be a case-insensitive prefix/suffix	of the
       other:

	  void foo(int count);
	  void foo(int count_input) { // no warning
	    int	count =	adjustCount(count_input);
	  }

       To help with refactoring, in some cases fix-it hints are	 generated  to
       align  parameter	 names	to a single naming convention. This works with
       the assumption that the function	definition is the most up-to-date ver-
       sion, as	it directly references parameter names in its body. Example:

	  void foo(int a); // warning and fix-it hint (replace "a" to "b")
	  int foo(int b) { return b + 2; } // definition with use of "b"

       In the case of multiple redeclarations or function template specializa-
       tions, a	warning	is issued for every  redeclaration  or	specialization
       inconsistent  with  the	definition  or the first declaration seen in a
       translation unit.

       IgnoreMacros
	      If this option is	set to true (default is	true), the check  will
	      not warn about names declared inside macros.

       Strict If  this	option	is  set	to true	(default is false), then names
	      must match exactly (or be	absent).

   readability-isolate-declaration
       Detects local variable declarations declaring more  than	 one  variable
       and tries to refactor the code to one statement per declaration.

       The  automatic code-transformation will use the same indentation	as the
       original	for every created statement and	add a line  break  after  each
       statement.  It keeps the	order of the variable declarations consistent,
       too.

	  void f() {
	    int	* pointer = nullptr, value = 42, * const const_ptr = &value;
	    // This declaration	will be	diagnosed and transformed into:
	    // int * pointer = nullptr;
	    // int value = 42;
	    // int * const const_ptr = &value;
	  }

       The  check  excludes  places where it is	necessary or common to declare
       multiple	variables in one statement and there is	no other way supported
       in the language.	Please note that structured bindings are  not  consid-
       ered.

	  // It	is not possible	to transform this declaration and doing	the declaration
	  // before the	loop will increase the scope of	the variable 'Begin' and 'End'
	  // which is undesirable.
	  for (int Begin = 0, End = 100; Begin < End; ++Begin);
	  if (int Begin	= 42, Result = some_function(Begin); Begin == Result);

	  // It	is not possible	to transform this declaration because the result is
	  // not functionality preserving as 'j' and 'k' would not be part of the
	  // 'if' statement anymore.
	  if (SomeCondition())
	    int	i = 42,	j = 43,	k = function(i,j);

   Limitations
       Global variables	and member variables are excluded.

       The  check  currently  does not support the automatic transformation of
       member-pointer-types.

	  struct S {
	    int	a;
	    const int b;
	    void f() {}
	  };

	  void f() {
	    // Only a diagnostic message is emitted
	    int	S::*p =	&S::a, S::*const q = &S::a;
	  }

       Furthermore, the	transformation is very cautious	when it	detects	 vari-
       ous  kinds  of  macros  or  preprocessor	directives in the range	of the
       statement. In this case the transformation will not happen to avoid un-
       expected	side-effects due to macros.

	  #define NULL 0
	  #define MY_NICE_TYPE int **
	  #define VAR_NAME(name) name##__LINE__
	  #define A_BUNCH_OF_VARIABLES int m1 =	42, m2 = 43, m3	= 44;

	  void macros()	{
	    int	*p1 = NULL, *p2	= NULL;
	    // Will be transformed to
	    // int *p1 = NULL;
	    // int *p2 = NULL;

	    MY_NICE_TYPE p3, v1, v2;
	    // Won't be	transformed, but a diagnostic is emitted.

	    int	VAR_NAME(v3),
		VAR_NAME(v4),
		VAR_NAME(v5);
	    // Won't be	transformed, but a diagnostic is emitted.

	    A_BUNCH_OF_VARIABLES
	    // Won't be	transformed, but a diagnostic is emitted.

	    int	Unconditional,
	  #if CONFIGURATION
		IfConfigured = 42,
	  #else
		IfConfigured = 0;
	  #endif
	    // Won't be	transformed, but a diagnostic is emitted.
	  }

   readability-magic-numbers
       Detects magic numbers, integer or floating point	literals that are  em-
       bedded in code and not introduced via constants or symbols.

       Many  coding guidelines advise replacing	the magic values with symbolic
       constants to improve readability. Here are a few	references:

	   Rule ES.45:	Avoid "magic constants"; use symbolic constants	in C++
	    Core Guidelines

	   Rule 5.1.1 Use symbolic names instead of literal values in code in
	    High Integrity C++

	   Item 17 in "C++ Coding Standards: 101 Rules, Guidelines  and  Best
	    Practices" by Herb Sutter and Andrei Alexandrescu

	   Chapter  17	 in "Clean Code	- A handbook of	agile software crafts-
	    manship." by Robert	C. Martin

	   Rule 20701 in "TRAIN REAL TIME  DATA  PROTOCOL  Coding  Rules"  by
	    Armin-Hagen	Weiss, Bombardier

	   http://wiki.c2.com/?MagicNumber

       Examples	of magic values:

	  double circleArea = 3.1415926535 * radius * radius;

	  double totalCharge = 1.08 * itemPrice;

	  int getAnswer() {
	     return -3;	// FILENOTFOUND
	  }

	  for (int mm =	1; mm <= 12; ++mm) {
	     std::cout << month[mm] << '\n';
	  }

       Example with magic values refactored:

	  double circleArea = M_PI * radius * radius;

	  const	double TAX_RATE	= 0.08;	 // or make it variable	and read from a	file

	  double totalCharge = (1.0 + TAX_RATE)	* itemPrice;

	  int getAnswer() {
	     return E_FILE_NOT_FOUND;
	  }

	  for (int mm =	1; mm <= MONTHS_IN_A_YEAR; ++mm) {
	     std::cout << month[mm] << '\n';
	  }

       For  integral  literals by default only 0 and 1 (and -1)	integer	values
       are accepted without  a	warning.  This	can  be	 overridden  with  the
       IgnoredIntegerValues  option. Negative values are accepted if their ab-
       solute value is present in the IgnoredIntegerValues list.

       As a special case for integral values, all powers of  two  can  be  ac-
       cepted without warning by enabling the IgnorePowersOf2IntegerValues op-
       tion.

       For  floating point literals by default the 0.0 floating	point value is
       accepted	without	a warning. The set of ignored floating point  literals
       can  be	configured  using  the IgnoredFloatingPointValues option.  For
       each value in that set, the given string	value is converted to a	float-
       ing-point value representation used by the target  architecture.	 If  a
       floating-point  literal	value  compares	 equal to one of the converted
       values, then that literal is  not  diagnosed  by	 this  check.  Because
       floating-point  equality	 is  used  to determine	whether	to diagnose or
       not, the	user needs to be aware of the details of floating-point	repre-
       sentations for any values that  cannot  be  precisely  represented  for
       their target architecture.

       For  each  value	 in  the IgnoredFloatingPointValues set, both the sin-
       gle-precision form and double-precision form are	accepted (for example,
       if 3.14 is in the set, neither 3.14f nor	3.14 will produce a warning).

       Scientific notation is supported	for both source	code input and option.
       Alternatively, the check	for the	floating point numbers can be disabled
       for    all    floating	  point	    values     by     enabling	   the
       IgnoreAllFloatingPointValues option.

       Since  values  0	and 0.0	are so common as the base counter of loops, or
       initialization values for sums, they are	always accepted	without	 warn-
       ing, even if not	present	in the respective ignored values list.

   Options
       IgnoredIntegerValues
	      Semicolon-separated list of magic	positive integers that will be
	      accepted without a warning. Default values are {1, 2, 3, 4}, and
	      0	is accepted unconditionally.

       IgnorePowersOf2IntegerValues
	      Boolean value indicating whether to accept all powers-of-two in-
	      teger values without warning. Default value is false.

       IgnoredFloatingPointValues
	      Semicolon-separated list of magic	positive floating point	values
	      that  will  be  accepted	without	 a warning. Default values are
	      {1.0, 100.0} and 0.0 is accepted unconditionally.

       IgnoreAllFloatingPointValues
	      Boolean value indicating whether to accept  all  floating	 point
	      values without warning. Default value is false.

       IgnoreBitFieldsWidths
	      Boolean  value indicating	whether	to accept magic	numbers	as bit
	      field widths without warning. This is  useful  for  example  for
	      register	definitions which are generated	from hardware specifi-
	      cations. Default value is	true.

   readability-make-member-function-const
       Finds non-static	member functions that can be made  const  because  the
       functions don't use this	in a non-const way.

       This  check  tries  to  annotate	methods	according to logical constness
       (not physical constness).  Therefore, it	will suggest to	 add  a	 const
       qualifier to a non-const	method only if this method does	something that
       is  already  possible though the	public interface on a const pointer to
       the object:

        reading a public member variable

        calling a public const-qualified member function

        returning const-qualified this

        passing const-qualified this as a parameter.

       This check will also suggest to add a const qualifier  to  a  non-const
       method if this method uses private data and functions in	a limited num-
       ber of ways where logical constness and physical	constness coincide:

        reading a member variable of builtin type

       Specifically, this check	will not suggest to add	a const	to a non-const
       method  if  the	method reads a private member variable of pointer type
       because that allows to modify the pointee which might not preserve log-
       ical constness.	For the	same reason, it	does not allow to call private
       member functions	or member functions on private member variables.

       In addition, this check ignores functions that

        are declared virtual

        contain a const_cast

        are templated or part of a class template

        have an empty body

        do	not	(implicitly)	 use	 this	  at	 all	  (see
	 readability-convert-member-functions-to-static).

       The following real-world	examples will be preserved by the check:

	  class	E1 {
	    Pimpl &getPimpl() const;
	  public:
	    int	&get() {
	      // Calling a private member function disables this check.
	      return getPimpl()->i;
	    }
	    ...
	  };

	  class	E2 {
	  public:
	    const int *get() const;
	    // const_cast disables this	check.
	    S *get() {
	      return const_cast<int*>(const_cast<const C*>(this)->get());
	    }
	    ...
	  };

       After  applying	modifications  as  suggested by	the check, running the
       check again might find more  opportunities  to  mark  member  functions
       const.

   readability-misleading-indentation
       Correct indentation helps to understand code. Mismatch of the syntacti-
       cal  structure  and  the	indentation of the code	may hide serious prob-
       lems.  Missing braces can also make it significantly harder to read the
       code, therefore it is important to use braces.

       The way to avoid	dangling else is to always check that an else  belongs
       to the if that begins in	the same column.

       You  can	 omit  braces when your	inner part of e.g. an if statement has
       only one	statement in it. Although in that case you  should  begin  the
       next statement in the same column with the if.

       Examples:

	  // Dangling else:
	  if (cond1)
	    if (cond2)
	      foo1();
	  else
	    foo2();  //	Wrong indentation: else	belongs	to if(cond2) statement.

	  // Missing braces:
	  if (cond1)
	    foo1();
	    foo2();  //	Not guarded by if(cond1).

   Limitations
       Note that this check only works as expected when	the tabs or spaces are
       used consistently and not mixed.

   readability-misplaced-array-index
       This check warns	for unusual array index	syntax.

       The following code has unusual array index syntax:

	  void f(int *X, int Y)	{
	    Y[X] = 0;
	  }

       becomes

	  void f(int *X, int Y)	{
	    X[Y] = 0;
	  }

       The check warns about such unusual syntax for readability reasons:

	      	There  are programmers that are	not familiar with this unusual
		syntax.

	      	It is possible that variables are mixed	up.

   readability-named-parameter
       Find functions with unnamed arguments.

       The check implements the	following rule originating in the  Google  C++
       Style Guide:

       https://google.github.io/styleguide/cppguide.html#Function_Declarations_and_Definitions

       All parameters should be	named, with identical names in the declaration
       and implementation.

       Corresponding cpplint.py	check name: readability/function.

   readability-non-const-parameter
       The  check  finds  function  parameters of a pointer type that could be
       changed to point	to a constant type instead.

       When const is used properly, many mistakes can be  avoided.  Advantages
       when using const	properly:

        prevent unintentional modification of data;

        get additional	warnings such as using uninitialized data;

        make it easier	for developers to see possible side effects.

       This check is not strict	about constness, it only warns when the	const-
       ness will make the function interface safer.

	  // warning here; the declaration "const char *p" would make the function
	  // interface safer.
	  char f1(char *p) {
	    return *p;
	  }

	  // no	warning; the declaration could be more const "const int	* const	p" but
	  // that does not make	the function interface safer.
	  int f2(const int *p) {
	    return *p;
	  }

	  // no	warning; making	x const	does not make the function interface safer
	  int f3(int x)	{
	    return x;
	  }

	  // no	warning; Technically, *p can be	const ("const struct S *p"). But making
	  // *p	const could be misleading. People might	think that it's	safe to	pass
	  // const data	to this	function.
	  struct S { int *a; int *b; };
	  int f3(struct	S *p) {
	    *(p->a) = 0;
	  }

	  // no	warning; p is referenced by an lvalue.
	  void f4(int *p) {
	    int	&x = *p;
	  }

   readability-qualified-auto
       Adds pointer qualifications to auto-typed variables that	are deduced to
       pointers.

       LLVM  Coding Standards advises to make it obvious if a auto typed vari-
       able is a pointer. This check will transform auto to auto  *  when  the
       type is deduced to be a pointer.

	  for (auto Data : MutatablePtrContainer) {
	    change(*Data);
	  }
	  for (auto Data : ConstantPtrContainer) {
	    observe(*Data);
	  }

       Would be	transformed into:

	  for (auto *Data : MutatablePtrContainer) {
	    change(*Data);
	  }
	  for (const auto *Data	: ConstantPtrContainer)	{
	    observe(*Data);
	  }

       Note  const  volatile  qualified	 types	will  retain  their  const and
       volatile	qualifiers. Pointers to	pointers will not be fully qualified.

	  const	auto Foo = cast<int *>(Baz1);
	  const	auto Bar = cast<const int *>(Baz2);
	  volatile auto	FooBar = cast<int *>(Baz3);
	  auto BarFoo =	cast<int **>(Baz4);

       Would be	transformed into:

	  auto *const Foo = cast<int *>(Baz1);
	  const	auto *const Bar	= cast<const int *>(Baz2);
	  auto *volatile FooBar	= cast<int *>(Baz3);
	  auto *BarFoo = cast<int **>(Baz4);

   Options
       AddConstToQualified
	      When set to true the check will add const	 qualifiers  variables
	      defined  as  auto	* or auto & when applicable.  Default value is
	      true.

	  auto Foo1 = cast<const int *>(Bar1);
	  auto *Foo2 = cast<const int *>(Bar2);
	  auto &Foo3 = cast<const int &>(Bar3);

       If AddConstToQualified is set to	false, it will be transformed into:

	  const	auto *Foo1 = cast<const	int *>(Bar1);
	  auto *Foo2 = cast<const int *>(Bar2);
	  auto &Foo3 = cast<const int &>(Bar3);

       Otherwise it will be transformed	into:

	  const	auto *Foo1 = cast<const	int *>(Bar1);
	  const	auto *Foo2 = cast<const	int *>(Bar2);
	  const	auto &Foo3 = cast<const	int &>(Bar3);

       Note in the LLVM	alias, the default value is false.

   readability-redundant-access-specifiers
       Finds classes, structs, and unions containing redundant	member	(field
       and method) access specifiers.

   Example
	  class	Foo {
	  public:
	    int	x;
	    int	y;
	  public:
	    int	z;
	  protected:
	    int	a;
	  public:
	    int	c;
	  }

       In  the	example	 above,	 the  second public declaration	can be removed
       without any changes of behavior.

   Options
       CheckFirstDeclaration
	      If set to	true, the check	will also diagnose if the first	access
	      specifier	declaration is redundant (e.g. private	inside	class,
	      or public	inside struct or union).  Default is false.

   Example
	  struct Bar {
	  public:
	    int	x;
	  }

       If  CheckFirstDeclaration  option is enabled, a warning about redundant
       access specifier	will be	emitted, because public	is the default	member
       access for structs.

   readability-redundant-control-flow
       This check looks	for procedures (functions returning no value) with re-
       turn  statements	at the end of the function. Such return	statements are
       redundant.

       Loop statements (for, while, do while) are checked for  redundant  con-
       tinue statements	at the end of the loop body.

       Examples:

       The following function f	contains a redundant return statement:

	  extern void g();
	  void f() {
	    g();
	    return;
	  }

       becomes

	  extern void g();
	  void f() {
	    g();
	  }

       The following function k	contains a redundant continue statement:

	  void k() {
	    for	(int i = 0; i <	10; ++i) {
	      continue;
	    }
	  }

       becomes

	  void k() {
	    for	(int i = 0; i <	10; ++i) {
	    }
	  }

   readability-redundant-declaration
       Finds redundant variable	and function declarations.

	  extern int X;
	  extern int X;

       becomes

	  extern int X;

       Such redundant declarations can be removed without changing program be-
       havior.	 They can for instance be unintentional	left overs from	previ-
       ous refactorings	when code has been moved around. Having	redundant dec-
       larations could in worst	case mean that there are  typos	 in  the  code
       that cause bugs.

       Normally	the code can be	automatically fixed, clang-tidy	can remove the
       second  declaration. However there are 2	cases when you need to fix the
       code manually:

        When the declarations are in different	header files;

        When multiple variables are declared together.

   Options
       IgnoreMacros
	      If set to	true, the check	will not give warnings inside  macros.
	      Default is true.

   readability-redundant-function-ptr-dereference
       Finds redundant dereferences of a function pointer.

       Before:

	  int f(int,int);
	  int (*p)(int,	int) = &f;

	  int i	= (**p)(10, 50);

       After:

	  int f(int,int);
	  int (*p)(int,	int) = &f;

	  int i	= (*p)(10, 50);

   readability-redundant-member-init
       Finds  member initializations that are unnecessary because the same de-
       fault constructor would be called if they were not present.

   Example
	  // Explicitly	initializing the member	s is unnecessary.
	  class	Foo {
	  public:
	    Foo() : s()	{}

	  private:
	    std::string	s;
	  };

   Options
       IgnoreBaseInCopyConstructors
	      Default is false.

	      When true, the check will	ignore unnecessary base	class initial-
	      izations within copy constructors, since	some  compilers	 issue
	      warnings/errors when base	classes	are not	explicitly initialized
	      in  copy	constructors.  For  example, gcc with -Wextra or -Wer-
	      ror=extra	issues warning or error	base class 'Bar' should	be ex-
	      plicitly initialized in the copy constructor if Bar()  were  re-
	      moved in the following example:

	  // Explicitly	initializing member s and base class Bar is unnecessary.
	  struct Foo : public Bar {
	    // Remove s() below. If IgnoreBaseInCopyConstructors!=0, keep Bar().
	    Foo(const Foo& foo)	: Bar(), s() {}
	    std::string	s;
	  };

   readability-redundant-preprocessor
       Finds  potentially redundant preprocessor directives. At	the moment the
       following cases are detected:

        #ifdef	.. #endif pairs	which are nested inside	an outer pair with the
	 same condition. For example:

	  #ifdef FOO
	  #ifdef FOO //	inner ifdef is considered redundant
	  void f();
	  #endif
	  #endif

        Same for #ifndef .. #endif pairs. For example:

	  #ifndef FOO
	  #ifndef FOO // inner ifndef is considered redundant
	  void f();
	  #endif
	  #endif

        #ifndef inside	an #ifdef with the same	condition:

	  #ifdef FOO
	  #ifndef FOO // inner ifndef is considered redundant
	  void f();
	  #endif
	  #endif

        #ifdef	inside an #ifndef with the same	condition:

	  #ifndef FOO
	  #ifdef FOO //	inner ifdef is considered redundant
	  void f();
	  #endif
	  #endif

        #if ..	#endif pairs which are nested inside an	outer  pair  with  the
	 same condition. For example:

	  #define FOO 4
	  #if FOO == 4
	  #if FOO == 4 // inner	if is considered redundant
	  void f();
	  #endif
	  #endif

   readability-redundant-smartptr-get
       Find and	remove redundant calls to smart	pointer's .get() method.

       Examples:

	  ptr.get()->Foo()  ==>	 ptr->Foo()
	  *ptr.get()  ==>  *ptr
	  *ptr->get()  ==>  **ptr
	  if (ptr.get()	== nullptr) ...	=> if (ptr == nullptr) ...

       IgnoreMacros
	      If  this option is set to	true (default is true),	the check will
	      not warn about calls inside macros.

   readability-redundant-string-cstr
       Finds	 unnecessary	 calls	   to	  std::string::c_str()	   and
       std::string::data().

   readability-redundant-string-init
       Finds unnecessary string	initializations.

   Examples
	  // Initializing string with empty string literal is unnecessary.
	  std::string a	= "";
	  std::string b("");

	  // becomes

	  std::string a;
	  std::string b;

	  // Initializing a string_view	with an	empty string literal produces an
	  // instance that compares equal to string_view().
	  std::string_view a = "";
	  std::string_view b("");

	  // becomes
	  std::string_view a;
	  std::string_view b;

   Options
       StringNames
	      Default is ::std::basic_string;::std::basic_string_view.

	      Semicolon-delimited  list	of class names to apply	this check to.
	      By  default  ::std::basic_string	applies	 to  std::string   and
	      std::wstring.	   Set	      to	e.g.	    ::std::ba-
	      sic_string;llvm::StringRef;QString to perform this check on cus-
	      tom classes.

   readability-simplify-boolean-expr
       Looks for boolean expressions involving boolean constants  and  simpli-
       fies  them to use the appropriate boolean expression directly.  Simpli-
       fies boolean expressions	by application of DeMorgan's Theorem.

       Examples:
		    +----------------------------+------------+
		    | Initial expression	 | Result     |
		    +----------------------------+------------+
		    | if (b == true)		 | if (b)     |
		    +----------------------------+------------+
		    | if (b == false)		 | if (!b)    |
		    +----------------------------+------------+
		    | if (b && true)		 | if (b)     |
		    +----------------------------+------------+
		    | if (b && false)		 | if (false) |
		    +----------------------------+------------+
		    | if (b || true)		 | if (true)  |
		    +----------------------------+------------+
		    | if (b || false)		 | if (b)     |
		    +----------------------------+------------+
		    | e	? true : false		 | e	      |
		    +----------------------------+------------+
		    | e	? false	: true		 | !e	      |
		    +----------------------------+------------+
		    | if (true)	t(); else f();	 | t();	      |
		    +----------------------------+------------+
		    | if (false) t(); else f();	 | f();	      |
		    +----------------------------+------------+
		    | if (e) return  true;  else | return e;  |
		    | return false;		 |	      |
		    +----------------------------+------------+
		    | if  (e) return false; else | return !e; |
		    | return true;		 |	      |
		    +----------------------------+------------+
		    | if (e) b = true; else b  = | b = e;     |
		    | false;			 |	      |
		    +----------------------------+------------+
		    | if (e) b = false;	else b = | b = !e;    |
		    | true;			 |	      |
		    +----------------------------+------------+
		    | if (e) return true; return | return e;  |
		    | false;			 |	      |
		    +----------------------------+------------+
		    | if  (e)  return false; re- | return !e; |
		    | turn true;		 |	      |
		    +----------------------------+------------+
		    | !(!a || b)		 | a &&	!b    |
		    +----------------------------+------------+
		    | !(a || !b)		 | !a && b    |
		    +----------------------------+------------+
		    | !(!a || !b)		 | a &&	b     |
		    +----------------------------+------------+
		    | !(!a && b)		 | a ||	!b    |
		    +----------------------------+------------+
		    | !(a && !b)		 | !a || b    |
		    +----------------------------+------------+
		    | !(!a && !b)		 | a ||	b     |
		    +----------------------------+------------+

       The resulting expression	e is modified as follows:

	      1. Unnecessary parentheses around	the expression are removed.

	      2. Negated applications of ! are eliminated.

	      3. Negated applications of comparison operators are  changed  to
		 use the opposite condition.

	      4. Implicit  conversions of pointers, including pointers to mem-
		 bers, to bool	are  replaced  with  explicit  comparisons  to
		 nullptr in C++11 or NULL in C++98/03.

	      5. Implicit  casts  to  bool are replaced	with explicit casts to
		 bool.

	      6. Object	expressions with explicit operator bool	conversion op-
		 erators are replaced with explicit casts to bool.

	      7. Implicit conversions of integral types	to bool	 are  replaced
		 with explicit comparisons to 0.

       Examples:

	      1. The  ternary  assignment bool b = (i <	0) ? true : false; has
		 redundant parentheses and becomes bool	b = i <	0;.

	      2. The conditional return	if (!b)	return false; return true; has
		 an implied double negation and	becomes	return b;.

	      3. The conditional return	if (i <	0) return false; return	 true;
		 becomes return	i >= 0;.

		 The conditional return	if (i != 0) return false; return true;
		 becomes return	i == 0;.

	      4. The  conditional return if (p)	return true; return false; has
		 an implicit conversion	of a pointer to	bool and  becomes  re-
		 turn p	!= nullptr;.

		 The  ternary  assignment bool b = (i &	1) ? true : false; has
		 an implicit conversion	of i & 1 to bool and becomes bool b  =
		 (i & 1) != 0;.

	      5. The  conditional  return  if (i & 1) return true; else	return
		 false;	has an implicit	conversion of an integer quantity i  &
		 1 to bool and becomes return (i & 1) != 0;

	      6. Given	struct	X  {  explicit operator	bool();	};, and	an in-
		 stance	x of struct X, the conditional return  if  (x)	return
		 true; return false; becomes return static_cast<bool>(x);

   Options
       ChainedConditionalReturn
	      If  true,	conditional boolean return statements at the end of an
	      if/else if chain will be transformed. Default is false.

       ChainedConditionalAssignment
	      If true, conditional  boolean  assignments  at  the  end	of  an
	      if/else if chain will be transformed. Default is false.

       SimplifyDeMorgan
	      If  true,	DeMorgan's Theorem will	be applied to simplify negated
	      conjunctions and disjunctions.  Default is true.

       SimplifyDeMorganRelaxed
	      If true, SimplifyDeMorgan	will also transform  negated  conjunc-
	      tions  and  disjunctions	where  there  is no negation on	either
	      operand.	This option  has  no  effect  if  SimplifyDeMorgan  is
	      false.  Default is false.

	      When Enabled:

		 bool X	= !(A && B)
		 bool Y	= !(A || B)

	      Would be transformed to:

		 bool X	= !A ||	!B
		 bool Y	= !A &&	!B

   readability-simplify-subscript-expr
       This  check  simplifies	subscript  expressions.	 Currently this	covers
       calling .data() and immediately doing an	array subscript	 operation  to
       obtain  a  single element, in which case	simply calling operator[] suf-
       fice.

       Examples:

	  std::string s	= ...;
	  char c = s.data()[i];	 // char c = s[i];

   Options
       Types  The list	of  type(s)  that  triggers  this  check.  Default  is
	      ::std::basic_string;::std::basic_string_view;::std::vec-
	      tor;::std::array

   readability-static-accessed-through-instance
       Checks  for  member  expressions	that access static members through in-
       stances,	and replaces them with uses of the appropriate qualified-id.

       Example:

       The following code:

	  struct C {
	    static void	foo();
	    static int x;
	  };

	  C *c1	= new C();
	  c1->foo();
	  c1->x;

       is changed to:

	  C *c1	= new C();
	  C::foo();
	  C::x;

   readability-static-definition-in-anonymous-namespace
       Finds static function and variable definitions in anonymous namespace.

       In this case, static is redundant, because anonymous  namespace	limits
       the visibility of definitions to	a single translation unit.

	  namespace {
	    static int a = 1; // Warning.
	    static const int b = 1; // Warning.
	    namespace inner {
	      static int c = 1;	// Warning.
	    }
	  }

       The check will apply a fix by removing the redundant static qualifier.

   readability-string-compare
       Finds string comparisons	using the compare method.

       A common	mistake	is to use the string's compare method instead of using
       the  equality  or  inequality operators.	The compare method is intended
       for sorting functions and thus returns a	negative  number,  a  positive
       number  or  zero	 depending on the lexicographical relationship between
       the strings compared.  If an equality or	inequality check can  suffice,
       that is recommended. This is recommended	to avoid the risk of incorrect
       interpretation of the return value and to simplify the code. The	string
       equality	 and  inequality operators can also be faster than the compare
       method due to early termination.

       Examples:

	  std::string str1{"a"};
	  std::string str2{"b"};

	  // use str1 != str2 instead.
	  if (str1.compare(str2)) {
	  }

	  // use str1 == str2 instead.
	  if (!str1.compare(str2)) {
	  }

	  // use str1 == str2 instead.
	  if (str1.compare(str2) == 0) {
	  }

	  // use str1 != str2 instead.
	  if (str1.compare(str2) != 0) {
	  }

	  // use str1 == str2 instead.
	  if (0	== str1.compare(str2)) {
	  }

	  // use str1 != str2 instead.
	  if (0	!= str1.compare(str2)) {
	  }

	  // Use str1 == "foo" instead.
	  if (str1.compare("foo") == 0)	{
	  }

       The above code examples show the	list of	if-statements that this	 check
       will  give a warning for. All of	them uses compare to check if equality
       or inequality of	two strings instead of using the correct operators.

   readability-suspicious-call-argument
       Finds function calls where the arguments	passed are provided out	of or-
       der, based on the difference between the	argument name and the  parame-
       ter names of the	function.

       Given  a	 function  call	f(foo, bar); and a function signature void f(T
       tvar, U uvar), the arguments foo	and bar	are swapped if foo (the	 argu-
       ment name) is more similar to uvar (the other parameter)	than tvar (the
       parameter  it  is  currently passed to) and bar is more similar to tvar
       than uvar.

       Warnings	might indicate either that the arguments are swapped, or  that
       the names' cross-similarity might hinder	code comprehension.

   Heuristics
       The  following  heuristics are implemented in the check.	 If any	of the
       enabled heuristics deem the arguments to	be provided out	 of  order,  a
       warning will be issued.

       The  heuristics	themselves  are	 implemented  by  considering pairs of
       strings,	and are	symmetric, so in the following there is	no distinction
       on which	string is the argument name and	which string is	the  parameter
       name.

   Equality
       The most	trivial	heuristic, which compares the two strings for case-in-
       sensitive equality.

   Abbreviation
       Common abbreviations can	be specified which will	deem the strings simi-
       lar  if the abbreviated and the abbreviation stand together.  For exam-
       ple, if src is registered as an abbreviation for	source,	then the  fol-
       lowing code example will	be warned about.

	  void foo(int source, int x);

	  foo(b, src);

       The abbreviations to recognise can be configured	with the Abbreviations
       check option.  This heuristic is	case-insensitive.

   Prefix
       The  prefix  heuristic  reports if one of the strings is	a sufficiently
       long prefix of the other	string,	e.g. target to targetPtr.   The	 simi-
       larity  percentage  is  the  length  ratio  of the prefix to the	longer
       string, in the previous example,	it would be 6 /	9 = 66.66...%.

       This heuristic can be configured	with bounds.  The default bounds  are:
       below 25% dissimilar and	above 30% similar.  This heuristic is case-in-
       sensitive.

   Suffix
       Analogous  to  the Prefix heuristic.  In	the case of oldValue and value
       compared, the similarity	percentage is 8	/ 5 = 62.5%.

       This heuristic can be configured	with bounds.  The default bounds  are:
       below 25% dissimilar and	above 30% similar.  This heuristic is case-in-
       sensitive.

   Substring
       The  substring  heuristic combines the prefix and the suffix heuristic,
       and tries to find the longest common substring in the two strings  pro-
       vided.	The  similarity	 percentage  is	the ratio of the found longest
       common substring	against	the longer of the two input strings.  For  ex-
       ample,  given  val  and	rvalue,	 the similarity	is 3 / 6 = 50%.	 If no
       characters are common in	the two	string,	0%.

       This heuristic can be configured	with bounds.  The default bounds  are:
       below 40% dissimilar and	above 50% similar.  This heuristic is case-in-
       sensitive.

   Levenshtein distance	(as Levenshtein)
       The  Levenshtein	 distance  describes how many single-character changes
       (additions, changes, or removals) must  be  applied  to	transform  one
       string into another.

       The  Levenshtein	distance is translated into a similarity percentage by
       dividing	it with	the length of the longer string, and taking  its  com-
       plement	with  regards  to 100%.	 For example, given something and any-
       thing, the distance is 4	edits, and the similarity percentage is	100% -
       4 / 9 = 55.55...%.

       This heuristic can be configured	with bounds.  The default bounds  are:
       below  50%  dissimilar  and  above  66%	similar.   This	 heuristic  is
       case-sensitive.

   Jaro--Winkler distance (as JaroWinkler)
       The Jaro--Winkler distance is an	edit  distance	like  the  Levenshtein
       distance.   It  is calculated from the amount of	common characters that
       are sufficiently	close to each other  in	 position,  and	 to-be-changed
       characters.   The original definition of	Jaro has been extended by Win-
       kler to weigh prefix similarities more.	The similarity	percentage  is
       expressed as an average of the common and non-common characters against
       the length of both strings.

       This  heuristic can be configured with bounds.  The default bounds are:
       below 75% dissimilar and	above 85% similar.  This heuristic is case-in-
       sensitive.

   Srensen--Dice coefficient (as Dice)
       The Srensen--Dice coefficient was originally  defined  to  measure  the
       similarity of two sets.	Formally, the coefficient is calculated	by di-
       viding  2  *  #(intersection)  with #(set1) + #(set2), where #()	is the
       cardinality function of sets.  This metric is  applied  to  strings  by
       creating	 bigrams  (substring sequences of length 2) of the two strings
       and using the set of bigrams for	the two	strings	as the two sets.

       This heuristic can be configured	with bounds.  The default bounds  are:
       below 60% dissimilar and	above 70% similar.  This heuristic is case-in-
       sensitive.

   Options
       MinimumIdentifierNameLength
	      Sets  the	 minimum  required  length  the	argument and parameter
	      names need to have. Names	shorter	than this length will  be  ig-
	      nored.  Defaults to 3.

       Abbreviations
	      For  the	Abbreviation heuristic (see here), this	option config-
	      ures the abbreviations in	 the  "abbreviation=abbreviated_value"
	      format.  The option is a string, with each value joined by ";".

	      By default, the following	abbreviations are set:

		  addr=address

		  arr=array

		  attr=attribute

		  buf=buffer

		  cl=client

		  cnt=count

		  col=column

		  cpy=copy

		  dest=destination

		  dist=distance

		  dst=distance

		  elem=element

		  hght=height

		  i=index

		  idx=index

		  len=length

		  ln=line

		  lst=list

		  nr=number

		  num=number

		  pos=position

		  ptr=pointer

		  ref=reference

		  src=source

		  srv=server

		  stmt=statement

		  str=string

		  val=value

		  var=variable

		  vec=vector

		  wdth=width

       The configuration options for each implemented heuristic	(see above) is
       constructed  dynamically.   In the following, <HeuristicName> refers to
       one of the keys from the	heuristics implemented.

       <HeuristicName>
	      True or False, whether a particular heuristic, such as  Equality
	      or Levenshtein is	enabled.

	      Defaults to True for every heuristic.

       <HeuristicName>DissimilarBelow, <HeuristicName>SimilarAbove
	      A	 value between 0 and 100, expressing a percentage.  The	bounds
	      set what percentage of similarity	the heuristic must deduce  for
	      the  two	identifiers  to	be considered similar or dissimilar by
	      the check.

	      Given arguments arg1 and arg2 passed to param1 and  param2,  re-
	      spectively,  the bounds check is performed in the	following way:
	      If the similarity	of the currently passed	argument  order	 (arg1
	      to param1) is below the DissimilarBelow threshold, and the simi-
	      larity  of the suggested swapped order (arg1 to param2) is above
	      the SimilarAbove threshold, the swap is reported.

	      For the defaults of each heuristic, see above.

   Name	synthesis
       When comparing the argument names and parameter	names,	the  following
       logic is	used to	gather the names for comparison:

       Parameter names are the identifiers as written in the source code.

       Argument	names are:

	   If a variable is passed, the variable's name.

	   If	a subsequent function call's return value is used as argument,
	    the	called function's name.

	   Otherwise, empty string.

       Empty argument or parameter names are ignored by	the heuristics.

   readability-uniqueptr-delete-release
       Replace delete <unique_ptr>.release() with <unique_ptr> = nullptr.  The
       latter is shorter, simpler and does not	require	 use  of  raw  pointer
       APIs.

	  std::unique_ptr<int> P;
	  delete P.release();

	  // becomes

	  std::unique_ptr<int> P;
	  P = nullptr;

   Options
       PreferResetCall
	      If  true,	 refactor by calling the reset member function instead
	      of assigning to nullptr. Default value is	false.

		 std::unique_ptr<int> P;
		 delete	P.release();

		 // becomes

		 std::unique_ptr<int> P;
		 P.reset();

   readability-uppercase-literal-suffix
       cert-dcl16-c redirects here as an alias for this	 check.	  By  default,
       only  the  suffixes  that  begin	with l (l, ll, lu, llu,	but not	u, ul,
       ull) are	diagnosed by that alias.

       hicpp-uppercase-literal-suffix redirects	here  as  an  alias  for  this
       check.

       Detects	when  the integral literal or floating point (decimal or hexa-
       decimal)	literal	has a non-uppercase suffix and provides	a fix-it  hint
       with the	uppercase suffix.

       All valid combinations of suffixes are supported.

	  auto x = 1;  // OK, no suffix.

	  auto x = 1u; // warning: integer literal suffix 'u' is not upper-case

	  auto x = 1U; // OK, suffix is	uppercase.

	  ...

   Options
       NewSuffixes
	      Optionally,  a list of the destination suffixes can be provided.
	      When the suffix is found,	a case-insensitive lookup in that list
	      is made, and if a	replacement is found that  is  different  from
	      the  current  suffix, then the diagnostic	is issued. This	allows
	      for fine-grained control of what suffixes	to consider  and  what
	      their replacements should	be.

   Example
       Given a list L;uL:

        l -> L

        L will	be kept	as is.

        ul -> uL

        Ul -> uL

        UL -> uL

        uL will be kept as is.

        ull will be kept as is, since it is not in the	list

        and so	on.

       IgnoreMacros
	      If  this option is set to	true (default is true),	the check will
	      not warn about literal suffixes inside macros.

   readability-use-anyofallof
       Finds range-based  for  loops  that  can	 be  replaced  by  a  call  to
       std::any_of    or    std::all_of.    In	  C++	 20   mode,   suggests
       std::ranges::any_of or std::ranges::all_of.

       Example:

	  bool all_even(std::vector<int> V) {
	    for	(int I : V) {
	      if (I % 2)
		return false;
	    }
	    return true;
	    // Replace loop by
	    // return std::ranges::all_of(V, [](int I) { return	I % 2 == 0; });
	  }

   zircon-temporary-objects
       Warns on	construction of	specific temporary objects in the Zircon  ker-
       nel.  If	the object should be flagged, If the object should be flagged,
       the fully qualified type	name must be explicitly	passed to the check.

       For  example, given the list of classes "Foo" and "NS::Bar", all	of the
       following will trigger the warning:

	  Foo();
	  Foo F	= Foo();
	  func(Foo());

	  namespace NS {

	  Bar();

	  }

       With the	same list, the following will not trigger the warning:

	  Foo F;		 // Non-temporary construction okay
	  Foo F(param);		 // Non-temporary construction okay
	  Foo *F = new Foo();	 // New	construction okay

	  Bar();		 // Not	NS::Bar, so okay
	  NS::Bar B;		 // Non-temporary construction okay

       Note that objects must be explicitly specified in order to be  flagged,
       and so objects that inherit a specified object will not be flagged.

       This check matches temporary objects without regard for inheritance and
       so  a  prohibited  base	class type does	not similarly prohibit derived
       class types.

	  class	Derived	: Foo {} // Derived is not explicitly disallowed
	  Derived();		 // and	so temporary construction is okay

   Options
       Names  A	semi-colon-separated list  of  fully-qualified	names  of  C++
	      classes  that  should not	be constructed as temporaries. Default
	      is empty.
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | Name						       | Offers	fixes |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | abseil-cleanup-ctad				       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | abseil-duration-addition				       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | abseil-duration-comparison			       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | abseil-duration-conversion-cast			       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | abseil-duration-division				       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | abseil-duration-factory-float			       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | abseil-duration-factory-scale			       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | abseil-duration-subtraction			       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | abseil-duration-unnecessary-conversion		       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | abseil-faster-strsplit-delimiter			       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | abseil-no-internal-dependencies			       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | abseil-no-namespace				       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | abseil-redundant-strcat-calls			       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | abseil-str-cat-append				       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | abseil-string-find-startswith			       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | abseil-string-find-str-contains			       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | abseil-time-comparison				       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | abseil-time-subtraction				       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | abseil-upgrade-duration-conversions		       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | altera-id-dependent-backward-branch		       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | altera-kernel-name-restriction			       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | altera-single-work-item-barrier			       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | altera-struct-pack-align				       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | altera-unroll-loops				       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | android-cloexec-accept				       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | android-cloexec-accept4				       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | android-cloexec-creat				       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | android-cloexec-dup				       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | android-cloexec-epoll-create			       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | android-cloexec-epoll-create1			       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | android-cloexec-fopen				       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | android-cloexec-inotify-init			       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | android-cloexec-inotify-init1			       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | android-cloexec-memfd-create			       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | android-cloexec-open				       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | android-cloexec-pipe				       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | android-cloexec-pipe2				       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | android-cloexec-socket				       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | android-comparison-in-temp-failure-retry		       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | boost-use-to-string				       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | bugprone-argument-comment			       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | bugprone-assert-side-effect			       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | bugprone-assignment-in-if-condition		       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | bugprone-bad-signal-to-kill-thread		       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | bugprone-bool-pointer-implicit-conversion	       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | bugprone-branch-clone				       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | bugprone-copy-constructor-init			       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | bugprone-dangling-handle				       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | bugprone-dynamic-static-initializers		       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | bugprone-easily-swappable-parameters		       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | bugprone-exception-escape			       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | bugprone-fold-init-type				       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | bugprone-forward-declaration-namespace		       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | bugprone-forwarding-reference-overload		       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | bugprone-implicit-widening-of-multiplication-result     | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | bugprone-inaccurate-erase			       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | bugprone-incorrect-roundings			       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | bugprone-infinite-loop				       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | bugprone-integer-division			       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | bugprone-lambda-function-name			       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | bugprone-macro-parentheses			       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | bugprone-macro-repeated-side-effects		       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | bugprone-misplaced-operator-in-strlen-in-alloc	       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | bugprone-misplaced-pointer-arithmetic-in-alloc	       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | bugprone-misplaced-widening-cast			       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | bugprone-move-forwarding-reference		       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | bugprone-multiple-statement-macro		       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | bugprone-no-escape				       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | bugprone-not-null-terminated-result		       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | bugprone-parent-virtual-call			       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | bugprone-posix-return				       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | bugprone-redundant-branch-condition		       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | bugprone-reserved-identifier			       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | bugprone-shared-ptr-array-mismatch		       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | bugprone-signal-handler				       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | bugprone-signed-char-misuse			       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | bugprone-sizeof-container			       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | bugprone-sizeof-expression			       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | bugprone-spuriously-wake-up-functions		       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | bugprone-string-constructor			       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | bugprone-string-integer-assignment		       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | bugprone-string-literal-with-embedded-nul	       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | bugprone-stringview-nullptr			       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | bugprone-suspicious-enum-usage			       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | bugprone-suspicious-include			       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | bugprone-suspicious-memory-comparison		       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | bugprone-suspicious-memset-usage			       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | bugprone-suspicious-missing-comma		       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | bugprone-suspicious-semicolon			       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | bugprone-suspicious-string-compare		       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | bugprone-swapped-arguments			       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | bugprone-terminating-continue			       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | bugprone-throw-keyword-missing			       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | bugprone-too-small-loop-variable			       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | bugprone-unchecked-optional-access		       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | bugprone-undefined-memory-manipulation		       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | bugprone-undelegated-constructor			       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | bugprone-unhandled-exception-at-new		       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | bugprone-unhandled-self-assignment		       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | bugprone-unused-raii				       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | bugprone-unused-return-value			       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | bugprone-use-after-move				       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | bugprone-virtual-near-miss			       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | cert-dcl21-cpp					       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | cert-dcl50-cpp					       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | cert-dcl58-cpp					       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | cert-env33-c					       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | cert-err33-c					       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | cert-err34-c					       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | cert-err52-cpp					       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | cert-err58-cpp					       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | cert-err60-cpp					       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | cert-flp30-c					       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | cert-mem57-cpp					       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | cert-msc50-cpp					       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | cert-msc51-cpp					       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | cert-oop57-cpp					       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | cert-oop58-cpp					       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | clang-analyzer-core.DynamicTypePropagation	       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | clang-analyzer-core.uninitialized.CapturedBlockVariable |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | clang-analyzer-cplusplus.InnerPointer		       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | clang-analyzer-nullability.NullableReturnedFromNonnull  |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | clang-analyzer-optin.osx.OSObjectCStyleCast	       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | clang-analyzer-optin.performance.GCDAntipattern	       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | clang-analyzer-optin.performance.Padding		       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | clang-analyzer-optin.portability.UnixAPI		       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | clang-analyzer-osx.MIG				       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | clang-analyzer-osx.NumberObjectConversion	       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | clang-analyzer-osx.OSObjectRetainCount		       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | clang-analyzer-osx.ObjCProperty			       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | clang-analyzer-osx.cocoa.AutoreleaseWrite	       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | clang-analyzer-osx.cocoa.Loops			       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | clang-analyzer-osx.cocoa.MissingSuperCall	       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | clang-analyzer-osx.cocoa.NonNilReturnValue	       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | clang-analyzer-osx.cocoa.RunLoopAutoreleaseLeak	       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | clang-analyzer-valist.CopyToSelf			       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | clang-analyzer-valist.Uninitialized		       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | clang-analyzer-valist.Unterminated		       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | concurrency-mt-unsafe				       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | concurrency-thread-canceltype-asynchronous	       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | cppcoreguidelines-avoid-goto			       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | cppcoreguidelines-avoid-non-const-global-variables      |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | cppcoreguidelines-init-variables			       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | cppcoreguidelines-interfaces-global-init		       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | cppcoreguidelines-macro-usage			       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | cppcoreguidelines-narrowing-conversions		       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | cppcoreguidelines-no-malloc			       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | cppcoreguidelines-owning-memory			       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | cppcoreguidelines-prefer-member-initializer	       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | cppcoreguidelines-pro-bounds-array-to-pointer-decay     |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | cppcoreguidelines-pro-bounds-constant-array-index       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | cppcoreguidelines-pro-bounds-pointer-arithmetic	       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | cppcoreguidelines-pro-type-const-cast		       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | cppcoreguidelines-pro-type-cstyle-cast		       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | cppcoreguidelines-pro-type-member-init		       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | cppcoreguidelines-pro-type-reinterpret-cast	       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | cppcoreguidelines-pro-type-static-cast-downcast	       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | cppcoreguidelines-pro-type-union-access		       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | cppcoreguidelines-pro-type-vararg		       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | cppcoreguidelines-slicing			       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | cppcoreguidelines-special-member-functions	       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | cppcoreguidelines-virtual-class-destructor	       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | darwin-avoid-spinlock				       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | darwin-dispatch-once-nonstatic			       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | fuchsia-default-arguments-calls			       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | fuchsia-default-arguments-declarations		       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | fuchsia-multiple-inheritance			       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | fuchsia-overloaded-operator			       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | fuchsia-statically-constructed-objects		       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | fuchsia-trailing-return				       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | fuchsia-virtual-inheritance			       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | google-build-explicit-make-pair			       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | google-build-namespaces				       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | google-build-using-namespace			       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | google-default-arguments				       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | google-explicit-constructor			       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | google-global-names-in-headers			       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | google-objc-avoid-nsobject-new			       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | google-objc-avoid-throwing-exception		       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | google-objc-function-naming			       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | google-objc-global-variable-declaration		       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | google-readability-avoid-underscore-in-googletest-name  |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | google-readability-casting			       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | google-readability-todo				       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | google-runtime-int				       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | google-runtime-operator				       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | google-upgrade-googletest-case			       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | hicpp-avoid-goto					       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | hicpp-exception-baseclass			       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | hicpp-multiway-paths-covered			       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | hicpp-no-assembler				       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | hicpp-signed-bitwise				       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | linuxkernel-must-use-errs			       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | llvm-header-guard				       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | llvm-include-order				       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | llvm-namespace-comment				       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | llvm-prefer-isa-or-dyn-cast-in-conditionals	       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | llvm-prefer-register-over-unsigned		       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | llvm-twine-local					       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | llvmlibc-callee-namespace			       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | llvmlibc-implementation-in-namespace		       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | llvmlibc-restrict-system-libc-headers		       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | misc-confusable-identifiers			       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | misc-const-correctness				       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | misc-definitions-in-headers			       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | misc-misleading-bidirectional			       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | misc-misleading-identifier			       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | misc-misplaced-const				       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | misc-new-delete-overloads			       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | misc-no-recursion				       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | misc-non-copyable-objects			       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | misc-non-private-member-variables-in-classes	       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | misc-redundant-expression			       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | misc-static-assert				       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | misc-throw-by-value-catch-by-reference		       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | misc-unconventional-assign-operator		       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | misc-uniqueptr-reset-release			       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | misc-unused-alias-decls				       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | misc-unused-parameters				       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | misc-unused-using-decls				       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | modernize-avoid-bind				       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | modernize-avoid-c-arrays				       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | modernize-concat-nested-namespaces		       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | modernize-deprecated-headers			       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | modernize-deprecated-ios-base-aliases		       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | modernize-loop-convert				       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | modernize-macro-to-enum				       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | modernize-make-shared				       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | modernize-make-unique				       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | modernize-pass-by-value				       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | modernize-raw-string-literal			       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | modernize-redundant-void-arg			       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | modernize-replace-auto-ptr			       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | modernize-replace-disallow-copy-and-assign-macro	       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | modernize-replace-random-shuffle			       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | modernize-return-braced-init-list		       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | modernize-shrink-to-fit				       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | modernize-unary-static-assert			       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | modernize-use-auto				       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | modernize-use-bool-literals			       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | modernize-use-default-member-init		       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | modernize-use-emplace				       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | modernize-use-equals-default			       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | modernize-use-equals-delete			       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | modernize-use-nodiscard				       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | modernize-use-noexcept				       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | modernize-use-nullptr				       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | modernize-use-override				       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | modernize-use-trailing-return-type		       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | modernize-use-transparent-functors		       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | modernize-use-uncaught-exceptions		       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | modernize-use-using				       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | mpi-buffer-deref					       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | mpi-type-mismatch				       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | objc-assert-equals				       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | objc-avoid-nserror-init				       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | objc-dealloc-in-category				       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | objc-forbidden-subclassing			       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | objc-missing-hash				       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | objc-nsinvocation-argument-lifetime		       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | objc-property-declaration			       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | objc-super-self					       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | openmp-exception-escape				       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | openmp-use-default-none				       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | performance-faster-string-find			       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | performance-for-range-copy			       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | performance-implicit-conversion-in-loop		       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | performance-inefficient-algorithm		       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | performance-inefficient-string-concatenation	       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | performance-inefficient-vector-operation		       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | performance-move-const-arg			       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | performance-move-constructor-init		       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | performance-no-automatic-move			       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | performance-no-int-to-ptr			       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | performance-noexcept-move-constructor		       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | performance-trivially-destructible		       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | performance-type-promotion-in-math-fn		       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | performance-unnecessary-copy-initialization	       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | performance-unnecessary-value-param		       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | portability-restrict-system-includes		       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | portability-simd-intrinsics			       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | portability-std-allocator-const			       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | readability-avoid-const-params-in-decls		       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | readability-braces-around-statements		       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | readability-const-return-type			       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | readability-container-contains			       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | readability-container-data-pointer		       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | readability-container-size-empty			       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | readability-convert-member-functions-to-static	       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | readability-delete-null-pointer			       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | readability-duplicate-include			       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | readability-else-after-return			       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | readability-function-cognitive-complexity	       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | readability-function-size			       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | readability-identifier-length			       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | readability-identifier-naming			       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | readability-implicit-bool-conversion		       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | readability-inconsistent-declaration-parameter-name     | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | readability-isolate-declaration			       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | readability-magic-numbers			       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | readability-make-member-function-const		       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | readability-misleading-indentation		       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | readability-misplaced-array-index		       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | readability-named-parameter			       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | readability-non-const-parameter			       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | readability-qualified-auto			       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | readability-redundant-access-specifiers		       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | readability-redundant-control-flow		       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | readability-redundant-declaration		       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | readability-redundant-function-ptr-dereference	       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | readability-redundant-member-init		       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | readability-redundant-preprocessor		       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | readability-redundant-smartptr-get		       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | readability-redundant-string-cstr		       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | readability-redundant-string-init		       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | readability-simplify-boolean-expr		       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | readability-simplify-subscript-expr		       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | readability-static-accessed-through-instance	       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | readability-static-definition-in-anonymous-namespace    | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | readability-string-compare			       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | readability-suspicious-call-argument		       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | readability-uniqueptr-delete-release		       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | readability-uppercase-literal-suffix		       | Yes	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | readability-use-anyofallof			       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+
     | zircon-temporary-objects				       |	      |
     +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------+

   Aliases..
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| Name										| Redirect					      |	Offers fixes |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| bugprone-narrowing-conversions						| cppcoreguidelines-narrowing-conversions	      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| cert-con36-c									| bugprone-spuriously-wake-up-functions		      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| cert-con54-cpp								| bugprone-spuriously-wake-up-functions		      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| cert-dcl03-c									| misc-static-assert				      |	Yes	     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| cert-dcl16-c									| readability-uppercase-literal-suffix		      |	Yes	     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| cert-dcl37-c									| bugprone-reserved-identifier			      |	Yes	     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| cert-dcl51-cpp								| bugprone-reserved-identifier			      |	Yes	     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| cert-dcl54-cpp								| misc-new-delete-overloads			      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| cert-dcl59-cpp								| google-build-namespaces			      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| cert-err09-cpp								| misc-throw-by-value-catch-by-reference	      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| cert-err61-cpp								| misc-throw-by-value-catch-by-reference	      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| cert-exp42-c									| bugprone-suspicious-memory-comparison		      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| cert-fio38-c									| misc-non-copyable-objects			      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| cert-flp37-c									| bugprone-suspicious-memory-comparison		      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| cert-msc30-c									| cert-msc50-cpp				      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| cert-msc32-c									| cert-msc51-cpp				      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| cert-oop11-cpp								| performance-move-constructor-init		      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| cert-oop54-cpp								| bugprone-unhandled-self-assignment		      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| cert-pos44-c									| bugprone-bad-signal-to-kill-thread		      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| cert-pos47-c									| concurrency-thread-canceltype-asynchronous	      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| cert-sig30-c									| bugprone-signal-handler			      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| cert-str34-c									| bugprone-signed-char-misuse			      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| clang-analyzer-core.CallAndMessage						| Clang	Static Analyzer	core.CallAndMessage	      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| clang-analyzer-core.DivideZero						| Clang	Static Analyzer	core.DivideZero		      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| clang-analyzer-core.NonNullParamChecker					| Clang	Static	Analyzer  core.NonNullParam-	      |		     |
|										| Checker					      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| clang-analyzer-core.NullDereference						| Clang	Static Analyzer	core.NullDereference	      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| clang-analyzer-core.StackAddressEscape					| Clang	 Static	 Analyzer core.StackAddress-	      |		     |
|										| Escape					      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| clang-analyzer-core.UndefinedBinaryOperatorResult				| Clang	Static Analyzer	 core.UndefinedBina-	      |		     |
|										| ryOperatorResult				      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| clang-analyzer-core.VLASize							| Clang	Static Analyzer	core.VLASize		      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| clang-analyzer-core.uninitialized.ArraySubscript				| Clang	  Static   Analyzer  core.uninitial-	      |		     |
|										| ized.ArraySubscript				      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| clang-analyzer-core.uninitialized.Assign					| Clang	 Static	  Analyzer   core.uninitial-	      |		     |
|										| ized.Assign					      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| clang-analyzer-core.uninitialized.Branch					| Clang	  Static   Analyzer  core.uninitial-	      |		     |
|										| ized.Branch					      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| clang-analyzer-core.uninitialized.UndefReturn					| Clang	 Static	  Analyzer   core.uninitial-	      |		     |
|										| ized.UndefReturn				      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| clang-analyzer-cplusplus.Move							| Clang	Static Analyzer	cplusplus.Move		      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| clang-analyzer-cplusplus.NewDelete						| Clang	Static Analyzer	cplusplus.NewDelete	      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| clang-analyzer-cplusplus.NewDeleteLeaks					| Clang	Static Analyzer	cplusplus.NewDelete-	      |		     |
|										| Leaks						      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| clang-analyzer-deadcode.DeadStores						| Clang	Static Analyzer	deadcode.DeadStores	      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| clang-analyzer-nullability.NullPassedToNonnull				| Clang	 Static	 Analyzer  nullability.Null-	      |		     |
|										| PassedToNonnull				      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| clang-analyzer-nullability.NullReturnedFromNonnull				| Clang	Static Analyzer	 nullability.NullRe-	      |		     |
|										| turnedFromNonnull				      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| clang-analyzer-nullability.NullableDereferenced				| Clang	  Static  Analyzer  nullability.Nul-	      |		     |
|										| lableDereferenced				      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| clang-analyzer-nullability.NullablePassedToNonnull				| Clang	 Static	 Analyzer   nullability.Nul-	      |		     |
|										| lablePassedToNonnull				      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| clang-analyzer-optin.cplusplus.UninitializedObject				| Clang	   Static    Analyzer	optin.cplus-	      |		     |
|										| plus.UninitializedObject			      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| clang-analyzer-optin.cplusplus.VirtualCall					| Clang	Static Analyzer	optin.cplusplus.Vir-	      |		     |
|										| tualCall					      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| clang-analyzer-optin.mpi.MPI-Checker						| Clang		  Static	    Analyzer	      |		     |
|										| optin.mpi.MPI-Checker				      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| clang-analyzer-optin.osx.cocoa.localizability.EmptyLocalizationContextChecker	| Clang	 Static	Analyzer optin.osx.cocoa.lo-	      |		     |
|										| calizability.EmptyLocalizationCon-		      |		     |
|										| textChecker					      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| clang-analyzer-optin.osx.cocoa.localizability.NonLocalizedStringChecker	| Clang	Static Analyzer	 optin.osx.cocoa.lo-	      |		     |
|										| calizability.NonLocalizedStringChecker	      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| clang-analyzer-osx.API							| Clang	Static Analyzer	osx.API			      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| clang-analyzer-osx.SecKeychainAPI						| Clang	Static Analyzer	osx.SecKeychainAPI	      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| clang-analyzer-osx.cocoa.AtSync						| Clang	Static Analyzer	osx.cocoa.AtSync	      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| clang-analyzer-osx.cocoa.ClassRelease						| Clang	 Static	 Analyzer osx.cocoa.ClassRe-	      |		     |
|										| lease						      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| clang-analyzer-osx.cocoa.Dealloc						| Clang	Static Analyzer	osx.cocoa.Dealloc	      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| clang-analyzer-osx.cocoa.IncompatibleMethodTypes				| Clang	Static Analyzer	osx.cocoa.Incompati-	      |		     |
|										| bleMethodTypes				      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| clang-analyzer-osx.cocoa.NSAutoreleasePool					| Clang	Static Analyzer	 osx.cocoa.NSAutore-	      |		     |
|										| leasePool					      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| clang-analyzer-osx.cocoa.NSError						| Clang	Static Analyzer	osx.cocoa.NSError	      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| clang-analyzer-osx.cocoa.NilArg						| Clang	Static Analyzer	osx.cocoa.NilArg	      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| clang-analyzer-osx.cocoa.ObjCGenerics						| Clang	Static Analyzer	osx.cocoa.ObjCGener-	      |		     |
|										| ics						      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| clang-analyzer-osx.cocoa.RetainCount						| Clang	 Static	 Analyzer  osx.cocoa.Retain-	      |		     |
|										| Count						      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| clang-analyzer-osx.cocoa.SelfInit						| Clang	Static Analyzer	osx.cocoa.SelfInit	      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| clang-analyzer-osx.cocoa.SuperDealloc						| Clang	Static Analyzer	osx.cocoa.SuperDeal-	      |		     |
|										| loc						      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| clang-analyzer-osx.cocoa.UnusedIvars						| Clang	Static	Analyzer  osx.cocoa.UnusedI-	      |		     |
|										| vars						      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| clang-analyzer-osx.cocoa.VariadicMethodTypes					| Clang	  Static   Analyzer  osx.cocoa.Vari-	      |		     |
|										| adicMethodTypes				      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| clang-analyzer-osx.coreFoundation.CFError					| Clang	 Static	  Analyzer   osx.coreFounda-	      |		     |
|										| tion.CFError					      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| clang-analyzer-osx.coreFoundation.CFNumber					| Clang	  Static   Analyzer  osx.coreFounda-	      |		     |
|										| tion.CFNumber					      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| clang-analyzer-osx.coreFoundation.CFRetainRelease				| Clang	 Static	  Analyzer   osx.coreFounda-	      |		     |
|										| tion.CFRetainRelease				      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| clang-analyzer-osx.coreFoundation.containers.OutOfBounds			| Clang	  Static   Analyzer  osx.coreFounda-	      |		     |
|										| tion.containers.OutOfBounds			      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| clang-analyzer-osx.coreFoundation.containers.PointerSizedValues		| Clang	 Static	  Analyzer   osx.coreFounda-	      |		     |
|										| tion.containers.PointerSizedValues		      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| clang-analyzer-security.FloatLoopCounter					| Clang	 Static	Analyzer security.FloatLoop-	      |		     |
|										| Counter					      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| clang-analyzer-security.insecureAPI.DeprecatedOrUnsafeBufferHandling		| Clang	  Static   Analyzer   security.inse-	      |		     |
|										| cureAPI.DeprecatedOrUnsafeBufferHandling	      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| clang-analyzer-security.insecureAPI.UncheckedReturn				| Clang	  Static   Analyzer   security.inse-	      |		     |
|										| cureAPI.UncheckedReturn			      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| clang-analyzer-security.insecureAPI.bcmp					| Clang	  Static   Analyzer   security.inse-	      |		     |
|										| cureAPI.bcmp					      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| clang-analyzer-security.insecureAPI.bcopy					| Clang	  Static   Analyzer   security.inse-	      |		     |
|										| cureAPI.bcopy					      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| clang-analyzer-security.insecureAPI.bzero					| Clang	  Static   Analyzer   security.inse-	      |		     |
|										| cureAPI.bzero					      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| clang-analyzer-security.insecureAPI.getpw					| Clang	  Static   Analyzer   security.inse-	      |		     |
|										| cureAPI.getpw					      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| clang-analyzer-security.insecureAPI.gets					| Clang	  Static   Analyzer   security.inse-	      |		     |
|										| cureAPI.gets					      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| clang-analyzer-security.insecureAPI.mkstemp					| Clang	  Static   Analyzer   security.inse-	      |		     |
|										| cureAPI.mkstemp				      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| clang-analyzer-security.insecureAPI.mktemp					| Clang	  Static   Analyzer   security.inse-	      |		     |
|										| cureAPI.mktemp				      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| clang-analyzer-security.insecureAPI.rand					| Clang	  Static   Analyzer   security.inse-	      |		     |
|										| cureAPI.rand					      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| clang-analyzer-security.insecureAPI.strcpy					| Clang	  Static   Analyzer   security.inse-	      |		     |
|										| cureAPI.strcpy				      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| clang-analyzer-security.insecureAPI.vfork					| Clang	  Static   Analyzer   security.inse-	      |		     |
|										| cureAPI.vfork					      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| clang-analyzer-unix.API							| Clang	Static Analyzer	unix.API		      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| clang-analyzer-unix.Malloc							| Clang	Static Analyzer	unix.Malloc		      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| clang-analyzer-unix.MallocSizeof						| Clang	Static Analyzer	unix.MallocSizeof	      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| clang-analyzer-unix.MismatchedDeallocator					| Clang	Static Analyzer	unix.MismatchedDeal-	      |		     |
|										| locator					      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| clang-analyzer-unix.Vfork							| Clang	Static Analyzer	unix.Vfork		      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| clang-analyzer-unix.cstring.BadSizeArg					| Clang	 Static	 Analyzer  unix.cstring.Bad-	      |		     |
|										| SizeArg					      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| clang-analyzer-unix.cstring.NullArg						| Clang	Static Analyzer	unix.cstring.NullArg	      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| cppcoreguidelines-avoid-c-arrays						| modernize-avoid-c-arrays			      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| cppcoreguidelines-avoid-magic-numbers						| readability-magic-numbers			      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| cppcoreguidelines-c-copy-assignment-signature					| misc-unconventional-assign-operator		      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| cppcoreguidelines-explicit-virtual-functions					| modernize-use-override			      |	Yes	     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| cppcoreguidelines-macro-to-enum						| modernize-macro-to-enum			      |	Yes	     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| cppcoreguidelines-non-private-member-variables-in-classes			| misc-non-private-member-variables-in-classes	      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| fuchsia-header-anon-namespaces						| google-build-namespaces			      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| google-readability-braces-around-statements					| readability-braces-around-statements		      |	Yes	     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| google-readability-function-size						| readability-function-size			      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| google-readability-namespace-comments						| llvm-namespace-comment			      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| hicpp-avoid-c-arrays								| modernize-avoid-c-arrays			      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| hicpp-braces-around-statements						| readability-braces-around-statements		      |	Yes	     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| hicpp-deprecated-headers							| modernize-deprecated-headers			      |	Yes	     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| hicpp-explicit-conversions							| google-explicit-constructor			      |	Yes	     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| hicpp-function-size								| readability-function-size			      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| hicpp-invalid-access-moved							| bugprone-use-after-move			      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| hicpp-member-init								| cppcoreguidelines-pro-type-member-init	      |	Yes	     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| hicpp-move-const-arg								| performance-move-const-arg			      |	Yes	     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| hicpp-named-parameter								| readability-named-parameter			      |	Yes	     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| hicpp-new-delete-operators							| misc-new-delete-overloads			      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| hicpp-no-array-decay								| cppcoreguidelines-pro-bounds-array-to-pointer-decay |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| hicpp-no-malloc								| cppcoreguidelines-no-malloc			      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| hicpp-noexcept-move								| performance-noexcept-move-constructor		      |	Yes	     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| hicpp-special-member-functions						| cppcoreguidelines-special-member-functions	      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| hicpp-static-assert								| misc-static-assert				      |	Yes	     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| hicpp-undelegated-constructor							| bugprone-undelegated-constructor		      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| hicpp-uppercase-literal-suffix						| readability-uppercase-literal-suffix		      |	Yes	     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| hicpp-use-auto								| modernize-use-auto				      |	Yes	     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| hicpp-use-emplace								| modernize-use-emplace				      |	Yes	     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| hicpp-use-equals-default							| modernize-use-equals-default			      |	Yes	     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| hicpp-use-equals-delete							| modernize-use-equals-delete			      |	Yes	     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| hicpp-use-noexcept								| modernize-use-noexcept			      |	Yes	     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| hicpp-use-nullptr								| modernize-use-nullptr				      |	Yes	     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| hicpp-use-override								| modernize-use-override			      |	Yes	     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| hicpp-vararg									| cppcoreguidelines-pro-type-vararg		      |		     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| llvm-else-after-return							| readability-else-after-return			      |	Yes	     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+
| llvm-qualified-auto								| readability-qualified-auto			      |	Yes	     |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+--------------+

   Clang-tidy IDE/Editor Integrations
       Apart from being	a standalone tool, clang-tidy is integrated into vari-
       ous  IDEs, code analyzers, and editors. We recommend using clangd which
       integrates clang-tidy and is available in most  major  editors  through
       plugins (Vim, Emacs, Visual Studio Code,	Sublime	Text and more).

       The  following  table shows the most well-known clang-tidy integrations
       in detail.
 +-------------+------------+-------------+-------------+-------------+------------+
 |	       | Feature    |		  |		|	      |		   |
 +-------------+------------+-------------+-------------+-------------+------------+
 | Tool	       | On-the-fly | Check  list | Options  to	| Configura-  |	Custom	   |
 |	       | inspection | configura-  | checks	| tion	  via |	clang-tidy |
 |	       |	    | tion (GUI)  | (GUI)	| .clang-tidy |	binary	   |
 |	       |	    |		  |		| files	      |		   |
 +-------------+------------+-------------+-------------+-------------+------------+
 | A.L.E.  for | +	    | -		  | -		| -	      |	+	   |
 | Vim	       |	    |		  |		|	      |		   |
 +-------------+------------+-------------+-------------+-------------+------------+
 | Clang Power | -	    | +		  | -		| +	      |	-	   |
 | Tools   for |	    |		  |		|	      |		   |
 | Visual Stu- |	    |		  |		|	      |		   |
 | dio	       |	    |		  |		|	      |		   |
 +-------------+------------+-------------+-------------+-------------+------------+
 | Clangd      | +	    | -		  | -		| +	      |	-	   |
 +-------------+------------+-------------+-------------+-------------+------------+
 | CLion IDE   | +	    | +		  | +		| +	      |	+	   |
 +-------------+------------+-------------+-------------+-------------+------------+
 | CodeChecker | -	    | -		  | -		| -	      |	+	   |
 +-------------+------------+-------------+-------------+-------------+------------+
 | CPPCheck    | -	    | -		  | -		| -	      |	-	   |
 +-------------+------------+-------------+-------------+-------------+------------+
 | CPPDepend   | -	    | -		  | -		| -	      |	-	   |
 +-------------+------------+-------------+-------------+-------------+------------+
 | Flycheck    | +	    | -		  | -		| +	      |	+	   |
 | for Emacs   |	    |		  |		|	      |		   |
 +-------------+------------+-------------+-------------+-------------+------------+
 | KDevelop    | -	    | +		  | +		| +	      |	+	   |
 | IDE	       |	    |		  |		|	      |		   |
 +-------------+------------+-------------+-------------+-------------+------------+
 | Qt  Creator | +	    | +		  | -		| +	      |	+	   |
 | IDE	       |	    |		  |		|	      |		   |
 +-------------+------------+-------------+-------------+-------------+------------+
 | ReSharper   | +	    | +		  | -		| +	      |	+	   |
 | C++ for Vi- |	    |		  |		|	      |		   |
 | sual	Studio |	    |		  |		|	      |		   |
 +-------------+------------+-------------+-------------+-------------+------------+
 | Syntastic   | +	    | -		  | -		| -	      |	+	   |
 | for Vim     |	    |		  |		|	      |		   |
 +-------------+------------+-------------+-------------+-------------+------------+
 | Visual  As- | +	    | +		  | -		| -	      |	-	   |
 | sist	   for |	    |		  |		|	      |		   |
 | Visual Stu- |	    |		  |		|	      |		   |
 | dio	       |	    |		  |		|	      |		   |
 +-------------+------------+-------------+-------------+-------------+------------+

       IDEs

       CLion 2017.2 and	later integrates clang-tidy as	an  extension  to  the
       built-in	 code  analyzer.  Starting from	2018.2 EAP, CLion allows using
       clang-tidy via Clangd. Inspections and applicable quick-fixes are  per-
       formed  on  the	fly,  and checks can be	configured in standard command
       line format. In this integration, you can switch	to the clang-tidy  bi-
       nary  different	from  the  bundled  one,  pass	the  configuration  in
       .clang-tidy files instead of using the IDE settings, and	configure  op-
       tions for particular checks.

       KDevelop	 with  the  kdev-clang-tidy plugin, starting from version 5.1,
       performs	static analysis	using  clang-tidy.  The	 plugin	 launches  the
       clang-tidy  binary from the specified location and parses its output to
       provide a list of issues.

       QtCreator 4.6 integrates	clang-tidy warnings into the  editor  diagnos-
       tics under the Clang Code Model.	To employ clang-tidy inspection	in Qt-
       Creator,	you need to create a copy of one of the	presets	and choose the
       checks  to  be  performed. Since	QtCreator 4.7 project-wide analysis is
       possible	with the Clang Tools analyzer.

       MS Visual Studio	has a native clang-tidy-vs plugin and also  can	 inte-
       grate  clang-tidy  by means of three other tools. The ReSharper C++ ex-
       tension,	version	2017.3 and later, provides seamless  clang-tidy	 inte-
       gration:	checks and quick-fixes run alongside native inspections. Apart
       from  that, ReSharper C++ incorporates clang-tidy as a separate step of
       its code	clean-up process. Visual Assist	build 2210 includes  a	subset
       of  clang-tidy  checklist to inspect the	code as	you edit.  Another way
       to bring	clang-tidy functionality to Visual Studio is the  Clang	 Power
       Tools  plugin,  which  includes	most of	the clang-tidy checks and runs
       them during compilation or as a separate	step of	code analysis.

       Editors

       Emacs24,	when expanded  with  the  Flycheck  plugin,  incorporates  the
       clang-tidy  inspection  into  the syntax	analyzer. For Vim, you can use
       Syntastic, which	includes clang-tidy, or	A.L.E.,	a lint engine that ap-
       plies clang-tidy	along with other linters.

       Analyzers

       clang-tidy is integrated	in CPPDepend starting from version 2018.1  and
       CPPCheck	1.82. CPPCheck integration lets	you import Visual Studio solu-
       tions and run the clang-tidy inspection on them.	The CodeChecker	appli-
       cation  of  version  5.3	 or  later,  which  also comes as a plugin for
       Eclipse,	supports clang-tidy as a static	analysis instrument and	allows
       to use a	custom clang-tidy binary.

   Getting Involved
       clang-tidy has several own checks and can  run  Clang  static  analyzer
       checks, but its power is	in the ability to easily write custom checks.

       Checks  are  organized  in modules, which can be	linked into clang-tidy
       with minimal or no code changes in clang-tidy.

       Checks can plug into the	 analysis  on  the  preprocessor  level	 using
       PPCallbacks  or	on  the	AST level using	AST Matchers. When an error is
       found, checks can report	them in	a way similar to how Clang diagnostics
       work. A fix-it hint can be attached to a	diagnostic message.

       The interface provided by clang-tidy makes it easy to write useful  and
       precise	checks	in just	a few lines of code. If	you have an idea for a
       good check, the rest of this document explains how to do	this.

       There are a few tools particularly useful when developing clang-tidy
       checks:

	      	add_new_check.py is a script to	automate the process of	adding
		a new check, it	will create the	check, update the  CMake  file
		and create a test;

	      	rename_check.py	does what the script name suggests, renames an
		existing check;

	      	pp-trace  logs	method	calls on PPCallbacks for a source file
		and is invaluable in understanding the preprocessor mechanism;

	      	clang-query is invaluable for interactive prototyping  of  AST
		matchers and exploration of the	Clang AST;

	      	clang-check  with the -ast-dump	(and optionally	-ast-dump-fil-
		ter) provides a	convenient way to dump AST of a	C++ program.

       If  CMake  is  configured  with	 CLANG_TIDY_ENABLE_STATIC_ANALYZER=NO,
       clang-tidy  will	 not  be  built	 with support for the clang-analyzer-*
       checks or the mpi-* checks.

   Choosing the	Right Place for	your Check
       If you have an idea of a	check, you should decide whether it should  be
       implemented as a:

        Clang	diagnostic:  if	the check is generic enough, targets code pat-
	 terns that most probably are bugs (rather than	style  or  readability
	 issues),  can be implemented effectively and with extremely low false
	 positive rate,	it may make a good Clang diagnostic.

        Clang static analyzer check: if the check requires some sort of  con-
	 trol flow analysis, it	should probably	be implemented as a static an-
	 alyzer	check.

        clang-tidy  check  is	a  good	choice for linter-style	checks,	checks
	 that are related to a certain coding style, checks that address  code
	 readability, etc.

   Preparing your Workspace
       If you are new to LLVM development, you should read the Getting Started
       with  the LLVM System, Using Clang Tools	and How	To Setup Clang Tooling
       For LLVM	documents to check out and build LLVM, Clang and  Clang	 Extra
       Tools with CMake.

       Once  you are done, change to the llvm/clang-tools-extra	directory, and
       let's start!

       When you	configure the CMake build, make	sure that you enable the clang
       and clang-tools-extra projects to build clang-tidy.  Because  your  new
       check will have associated documentation, you will also want to install
       Sphinx and enable it in the CMake configuration.	 To save build time of
       the  core Clang libraries you may want to only enable the X86 target in
       the CMake configuration.

   The Directory Structure
       clang-tidy source code resides in the llvm/clang-tools-extra  directory
       and is structured as follows:

	  clang-tidy/			    # Clang-tidy core.
	  |-- ClangTidy.h		    # Interfaces for users.
	  |-- ClangTidyCheck.h		    # Interfaces for checks.
	  |-- ClangTidyModule.h		    # Interface	for clang-tidy modules.
	  |-- ClangTidyModuleRegistry.h	    # Interface	for registering	of modules.
	     ...
	  |-- google/			    # Google clang-tidy	module.
	  |-+
	    |--	GoogleTidyModule.cpp
	    |--	GoogleTidyModule.h
		  ...
	  |-- llvm/			    # LLVM clang-tidy module.
	  |-+
	    |--	LLVMTidyModule.cpp
	    |--	LLVMTidyModule.h
		  ...
	  |-- objc/			    # Objective-C clang-tidy module.
	  |-+
	    |--	ObjCTidyModule.cpp
	    |--	ObjCTidyModule.h
		  ...
	  |-- tool/			    # Sources of the clang-tidy	binary.
		  ...
	  test/clang-tidy/		    # Integration tests.
	      ...
	  unittests/clang-tidy/		    # Unit tests.
	  |-- ClangTidyTest.h
	  |-- GoogleModuleTest.cpp
	  |-- LLVMModuleTest.cpp
	  |-- ObjCModuleTest.cpp
	      ...

   Writing a clang-tidy	Check
       So you have an idea of a	useful check for clang-tidy.

       First,  if  you're not familiar with LLVM development, read through the
       Getting Started with LLVM document for instructions on setting up  your
       workflow	and the	LLVM Coding Standards document to familiarize yourself
       with  the  coding style used in the project. For	code reviews we	mostly
       use LLVM	Phabricator.

       Next, you need to decide	which module the check belongs to. Modules are
       located in subdirectories of clang-tidy/	and contain checks targeting a
       certain aspect of code quality (performance, readability,  etc.),  cer-
       tain  coding  style or standard (Google,	LLVM, CERT, etc.)  or a	widely
       used API	(e.g. MPI). Their names	are the	same as	the user-facing	 check
       group names described above.

       After  choosing	the  module  and  the  name  for  the  check,  run the
       clang-tidy/add_new_check.py script to create the	skeleton of the	 check
       and  plug  it  to  clang-tidy.  It's  the recommended way of adding new
       checks.

       If we want to create  a	readability-awesome-function-names,  we	 would
       run:

	  $ clang-tidy/add_new_check.py	readability awesome-function-names

       The add_new_check.py script will:

	      	create	the class for your check inside	the specified module's
		directory and register it in the module	and in the build  sys-
		tem;

	      	create a lit test file in the test/clang-tidy/ directory;

	      	create	 a   documentation   file  and	include	 it  into  the
		docs/clang-tidy/checks/list.rst.

       Let's see in more detail	at the check class definition:

	  ...

	  #include "../ClangTidyCheck.h"

	  namespace clang {
	  namespace tidy {
	  namespace readability	{

	  ...
	  class	AwesomeFunctionNamesCheck : public ClangTidyCheck {
	  public:
	    AwesomeFunctionNamesCheck(StringRef	Name, ClangTidyContext *Context)
		: ClangTidyCheck(Name, Context)	{}
	    void registerMatchers(ast_matchers::MatchFinder *Finder) override;
	    void check(const ast_matchers::MatchFinder::MatchResult &Result) override;
	  };

	  } // namespace readability
	  } // namespace tidy
	  } // namespace clang

	  ...

       Constructor of the check	receives the Name and Context parameters,  and
       must forward them to the	ClangTidyCheck constructor.

       In  our	case  the check	needs to operate on the	AST level and it over-
       rides the registerMatchers and check methods. If	we wanted  to  analyze
       code  on	the preprocessor level,	we'd need instead to override the reg-
       isterPPCallbacks	method.

       In the registerMatchers method we create	an AST Matcher (see AST	Match-
       ers for more information) that will find	the pattern in the AST that we
       want to inspect.	The results of the matching are	passed	to  the	 check
       method, which can further inspect them and report diagnostics.

	  using	namespace ast_matchers;

	  void AwesomeFunctionNamesCheck::registerMatchers(MatchFinder *Finder)	{
	    Finder->addMatcher(functionDecl().bind("x"), this);
	  }

	  void AwesomeFunctionNamesCheck::check(const MatchFinder::MatchResult &Result)	{
	    const auto *MatchedDecl = Result.Nodes.getNodeAs<FunctionDecl>("x");
	    if (!MatchedDecl->getIdentifier() || MatchedDecl->getName().startswith("awesome_"))
	      return;
	    diag(MatchedDecl->getLocation(), "function %0 is insufficiently awesome")
		<< MatchedDecl
		<< FixItHint::CreateInsertion(MatchedDecl->getLocation(), "awesome_");
	  }

       (If   you   want	 to  see  an  example  of  a  useful  check,  look  at
       clang-tidy/google/ExplicitConstructorCheck.h			   and
       clang-tidy/google/ExplicitConstructorCheck.cpp).

       If  you	need  to  interact with	macros or preprocessor directives, you
       will  want   to	 override   the	  method   registerPPCallbacks.	   The
       add_new_check.py	 script	 does not generate an override for this	method
       in the starting point for your new check.

       If your check applies only under	a specific set of language options, be
       sure to override	the method isLanguageVersionSupported to reflect that.

   Check development tips
       Writing your first check	can be a daunting task,	 particularly  if  you
       are  unfamiliar with the	LLVM and Clang code bases.  Here are some sug-
       gestions	for orienting yourself in the codebase	and  working  on  your
       check incrementally.

   Guide to useful documentation
       Many of the support classes created for LLVM are	used by	Clang, such as
       StringRef  and  SmallVector.  These and other commonly used classes are
       described in the	Important and useful LLVM APIs and Picking  the	 Right
       Data  Structure	for the	Task sections of the LLVM Programmer's Manual.
       You don't need to memorize all the details of these classes; the	gener-
       ated doxygen documentation has everything  if  you  need	 it.   In  the
       header  LLVM/ADT/STLExtras.h you'll find	useful versions	of the STL al-
       gorithms	that operate on	LLVM containers, such as llvm::all_of.

       Clang is	implemented on top of LLVM  and	 introduces  its  own  set  of
       classes	that  you will interact	with while writing your	check.	When a
       check issues diagnostics	and fix-its, these are associated  with	 loca-
       tions  in the source code.  Source code locations, source files,	ranges
       of source locations and the SourceManager class provide the  mechanisms
       for describing such locations.  These and other topics are described in
       the  "Clang" CFE	Internals Manual.  Whereas the doxygen generated docu-
       mentation serves	as a reference to the internals	of Clang,  this	 docu-
       ment  serves  as	a guide	to other developers.  Topics in	that manual of
       interest	to a check developer are:

        The Clang "Basic" Library for information about  diagnostics,	fix-it
	 hints and source locations.

        The Lexer and Preprocessor Library for	information about tokens, lex-
	 ing (transforming characters into tokens) and the preprocessor.

        The  AST  Library for information about how C++ source	statements are
	 represented as	an abstract syntax tree	(AST).

       Most checks will	interact with C++  source  code	 via  the  AST.	  Some
       checks  will  interact with the preprocessor.  The input	source file is
       lexed and preprocessed and then parsed into the AST.  Once the  AST  is
       fully  constructed, the check is	run by applying	the check's registered
       AST matchers against the	AST and	invoking the check  with  the  set  of
       matched nodes from the AST.  Monitoring the actions of the preprocessor
       is detached from	the AST	construction, but a check can collect informa-
       tion  during  preprocessing  for	 later use by the check	when nodes are
       matched by the AST.

       Every syntactic (and sometimes semantic)	element	of the C++ source code
       is represented by different classes in the AST.	You  select  the  por-
       tions  of  the  AST you're interested in	by composing AST matcher func-
       tions.  You will	want to	study carefully	the AST	Matcher	 Reference  to
       understand the relationship between the different matcher functions.

   Using the Transformer library
       The  Transformer	 library  allows  you to write a check that transforms
       source code by expressing the transformation  as	 a  RewriteRule.   The
       Transformer  library  provides  functions for composing edits to	source
       code to create rewrite rules.  Unless you  need	to  perform  low-level
       source  location	 manipulation,	you  may want to consider writing your
       check with the Transformer library.  The	Clang Transformer Tutorial de-
       scribes the Transformer library in detail.

       To use the Transformer library, make the	following changes to the  code
       generated by the	add_new_check.py script:

        Include ../utils/TransformerClangTidyCheck.h instead of ../ClangTidy-
	 Check.h

        Change	 the  base  class  of your check from ClangTidyCheck to	Trans-
	 formerClangTidyCheck

        Delete	the override of	the registerMatchers and check methods in your
	 check class.

        Write a function that creates the RewriteRule for your	check.

        Call the function in your check's constructor	to  pass  the  rewrite
	 rule to TransformerClangTidyCheck's constructor.

   Developing your check incrementally
       The  best  way  to  develop your	check is to start with the simple test
       cases and increase complexity incrementally.  The test file created  by
       the add_new_check.py script is a	starting point for your	test cases.  A
       rough outline of	the process looks like this:

        Write a test case for your check.

        Prototype matchers on the test	file using clang-query.

        Capture the working matchers in the registerMatchers method.

        Issue the necessary diagnostics and fix-its in	the check method.

        Add  the necessary CHECK-MESSAGES and CHECK-FIXES annotations to your
	 test case to validate the diagnostics and fix-its.

        Build the target check-clang-tool to confirm the test passes.

        Repeat	the process until all aspects of your  check  are  covered  by
	 tests.

       The quickest way	to prototype your matcher is to	use clang-query	to in-
       teractively  build up your matcher.  For	complicated matchers, build up
       a matching expression incrementally and use clang-query's  let  command
       to save named matching expressions to simplify your matcher.  Just like
       breaking	 up a huge function into smaller chunks	with intention-reveal-
       ing names can help you understand a complex algorithm,  breaking	 up  a
       matcher	into  smaller matchers with intention-revealing	names can help
       you understand a	complicated matcher.  Once you have a working matcher,
       the C++ API will	be virtually  identical	 to  your  interactively  con-
       structed	 matcher.  You can use local variables to preserve your	inten-
       tion-revealing names that you applied to	nested matchers.

   Creating private matchers
       Sometimes you want to match a specific aspect of	 the  AST  that	 isn't
       provided	by the existing	AST matchers.  You can create your own private
       matcher	using  the same	infrastructure as the public matchers.	A pri-
       vate matcher can	simplify the processing	in your	check method by	elimi-
       nating complex hand-crafted AST traversal of the	matched	nodes.	 Using
       the  private  matcher  allows you to select the desired portions	of the
       AST directly in the matcher and refer to	it by  a  bound	 name  in  the
       check method.

   Unit	testing	helper code
       Private	custom	matchers  are a	good example of	auxiliary support code
       for your	check that can be tested with a	unit test.  It will be	easier
       to  test	 your matchers or other	support	classes	by writing a unit test
       than by writing a FileCheck  integration	 test.	 The  ASTMatchersTests
       target  contains	unit tests for the public AST matcher classes and is a
       good source of testing idioms for matchers.

       You can build the Clang-tidy unit tests by building the	ClangTidyTests
       target.	 Test  targets	in LLVM	and Clang are excluded from the	"build
       all" style action of IDE-based CMake generators,	so you need to explic-
       itly build the target for the unit tests	to be built.

   Making your check robust
       Once you've covered your	check with the basic "happy  path"  scenarios,
       you'll  want  to	 torture your check with as many edge cases as you can
       cover in	order to ensure	your check is robust.  Running your check on a
       large code base,	such as	Clang/LLVM, is a good way to catch things  you
       forgot  to  account  for	in your	matchers.  However, the	LLVM code base
       may be insufficient for testing purposes	as it was developed against  a
       particular  set	of coding styles and quality measures.	The larger the
       corpus of code the check	is tested against, the higher  confidence  the
       community will have in the check's efficacy and false positive rate.

       Some suggestions	to ensure your check is	robust:

        Create	header files that contain code matched by your check.

        Validate  that	fix-its	are properly applied to	test header files with
	 clang-tidy.  You will need to perform this test manually until	 auto-
	 mated	support	 for  checking	messages  and  fix-its is added	to the
	 check_clang_tidy.py script.

        Define	macros that contain code matched by your check.

        Define	template classes that contain code matched by your check.

        Define	template specializations that contain  code  matched  by  your
	 check.

        Test your check under both Windows and	Linux environments.

        Watch out for high false positive rates.  Ideally, a check would have
	 no  false  positives,	but  given that	matching against an AST	is not
	 control- or data flow-	sensitive, a number of false positives are ex-
	 pected.  The higher the false positive	 rate,	the  less  likely  the
	 check will be adopted in practice.  Mechanisms	should be put in place
	 to help the user manage false positives.

        There	are  two primary mechanisms for	managing false positives: sup-
	 porting a code	pattern	which allows the programmer to silence the di-
	 agnostic in an	ad hoc manner and check	configuration options to  con-
	 trol the behavior of the check.

        Consider supporting a code pattern to allow the programmer to silence
	 the  diagnostic  whenever such	a code pattern can clearly express the
	 programmer's intent.  For example, allowing an	explicit cast to  void
	 to silence an unused variable diagnostic.

        Consider  adding check	configuration options to allow the user	to opt
	 into more aggressive checking behavior	without	 burdening  users  for
	 the common high-confidence cases.

   Documenting your check
       The  add_new_check.py  script creates entries in	the release notes, the
       list of checks and a new	file for the check documentation  itself.   It
       is  recommended	that  you  have	a concise summation of what your check
       does in a single	sentence that is repeated in the release notes,	as the
       first sentence in the doxygen comments in  the  header  file  for  your
       check  class  and  as  the  first  sentence of the check	documentation.
       Avoid the phrase	"this check" in	your check summation and  check	 docu-
       mentation.

       If  your	check relates to a published coding guideline (C++ Core	Guide-
       lines, MISRA, etc.)  or style guide,  provide  links  to	 the  relevant
       guideline or style guide	sections in your check documentation.

       Provide	enough examples	of the diagnostics and fix-its provided	by the
       check so	that a user can	easily understand what will  happen  to	 their
       code  when the check is run.  If	there are exceptions or	limitations to
       your check, document them thoroughly.  This will	help users  understand
       the scope of the	diagnostics and	fix-its	provided by the	check.

       Building	 the target docs-clang-tools-html will run the Sphinx documen-
       tation  generator  and  create  documentation   HTML   files   in   the
       tools/clang/tools/extra/docs/html  directory  in	your build tree.  Make
       sure that your check is correctly shown in the release  notes  and  the
       list  of	 checks.   Make	sure that the formatting and structure of your
       check's documentation looks correct.

   Registering your Check
       (The add_new_check.py script takes care of registering the check	in  an
       existing	 module.  If  you  want	to create a new	module or know the de-
       tails, read on.)

       The check should	be registered in the corresponding module with a  dis-
       tinct name:

	  class	MyModule : public ClangTidyModule {
	   public:
	    void addCheckFactories(ClangTidyCheckFactories &CheckFactories) override {
	      CheckFactories.registerCheck<ExplicitConstructorCheck>(
		  "my-explicit-constructor");
	    }
	  };

       Now we need to register the module in the ClangTidyModuleRegistry using
       a statically initialized	variable:

	  static ClangTidyModuleRegistry::Add<MyModule>	X("my-module",
							  "Adds	my lint	checks.");

       When  using LLVM	build system, we need to use the following hack	to en-
       sure the	module is linked into the clang-tidy binary:

       Add this	near the ClangTidyModuleRegistry::Add<MyModule>	variable:

	  // This anchor is used to force the linker to	link in	the generated object file
	  // and thus register the MyModule.
	  volatile int MyModuleAnchorSource = 0;

       And this	to the main translation	unit of	the clang-tidy binary (or  the
       binary  you  link the clang-tidy	library	in) clang-tidy/tool/ClangTidy-
       Main.cpp:

	  // This anchor is used to force the linker to	link the MyModule.
	  extern volatile int MyModuleAnchorSource;
	  static int MyModuleAnchorDestination = MyModuleAnchorSource;

   Configuring Checks
       If a check needs	configuration options, it  can	access	check-specific
       options using the Options.get<Type>("SomeOption", DefaultValue) call in
       the  check constructor. In this case the	check should also override the
       ClangTidyCheck::storeOptions method to make the options provided	by the
       check discoverable. This	method lets clang-tidy know which options  the
       check  implements  and  what  the  current  values  are	(e.g.  for the
       -dump-config command line option).

	  class	MyCheck	: public ClangTidyCheck	{
	    const unsigned SomeOption1;
	    const std::string SomeOption2;

	  public:
	    MyCheck(StringRef Name, ClangTidyContext *Context)
	      :	ClangTidyCheck(Name, Context),
		SomeOption(Options.get("SomeOption1", -1U)),
		SomeOption(Options.get("SomeOption2", "some default")) {}

	    void storeOptions(ClangTidyOptions::OptionMap &Opts) override {
	      Options.store(Opts, "SomeOption1", SomeOption1);
	      Options.store(Opts, "SomeOption2", SomeOption2);
	    }
	    ...

       Assuming	the check is registered	with the name "my-check",  the	option
       can then	be set in a .clang-tidy	file in	the following way:

	  CheckOptions:
	    my-check.SomeOption1: 123
	    my-check.SomeOption2: 'some	other value'

       If you need to specify check options on a command line, you can use the
       inline YAML format:

	  $ clang-tidy -config="{CheckOptions: {a: b, x: y}}" ...

   Testing Checks
       To  run	tests for clang-tidy, build the	check-clang-tools target.  For
       instance, if you	configured your	CMake build  with  the	ninja  project
       generator, use the command:

	  $ ninja check-clang-tools

       clang-tidy  checks  can be tested using either unit tests or lit	tests.
       Unit tests may be more convenient to  test  complex  replacements  with
       strict  checks. Lit tests allow using partial text matching and regular
       expressions which makes them more suitable for  writing	compact	 tests
       for diagnostic messages.

       The  check_clang_tidy.py	script provides	an easy	way to test both diag-
       nostic messages and fix-its. It filters out CHECK lines from  the  test
       file, runs clang-tidy and verifies messages and fixes with two separate
       FileCheck  invocations:	once  with FileCheck's directive prefix	set to
       CHECK-MESSAGES, validating the diagnostic messages, and once  with  the
       directive  prefix  set  to  CHECK-FIXES,	running	against	the fixed code
       (i.e., the code after generated fix-its are  applied).  In  particular,
       CHECK-FIXES:  can  be  used  to	check  that  code  was not modified by
       fix-its,	by checking that it is present unchanged in  the  fixed	 code.
       The  full  set  of  FileCheck directives	is available (e.g., CHECK-MES-
       SAGES-SAME:, CHECK-MESSAGES-NOT:), though  typically  the  basic	 CHECK
       forms  (CHECK-MESSAGES  and  CHECK-FIXES) are sufficient	for clang-tidy
       tests. Note that	the FileCheck documentation mostly assumes the default
       prefix  (CHECK),	 and  hence  describes	the   directive	  as   CHECK:,
       CHECK-SAME:,  CHECK-NOT:,  etc.	Replace	CHECK by either	CHECK-FIXES or
       CHECK-MESSAGES for clang-tidy tests.

       An additional check enabled  by	check_clang_tidy.py  ensures  that  if
       CHECK-MESSAGES: is used in a file then every warning or error must have
       an associated CHECK in that file. Or, you can use CHECK-NOTES: instead,
       if you want to also ensure that all the notes are checked.

       To  use the check_clang_tidy.py script, put a .cpp file with the	appro-
       priate RUN line in the test/clang-tidy directory.  Use  CHECK-MESSAGES:
       and  CHECK-FIXES: lines to write	checks against diagnostic messages and
       fixed code.

       It's advised to make the	checks as specific as possible to avoid	checks
       matching	to incorrect parts of the input.  Use  [[@LINE+X]]/[[@LINE-X]]
       substitutions  and  distinct  function  and  variable names in the test
       code.

       Here's an example of a test using the check_clang_tidy.py  script  (the
       full		 source		    code	     is		    at
       test/clang-tidy/checkers/google/readability-casting.cpp):

	  // RUN: %check_clang_tidy %s google-readability-casting %t

	  void f(int a)	{
	    int	b = (int)a;
	    // CHECK-MESSAGES: :[[@LINE-1]]:11:	warning: redundant cast	to the same type [google-readability-casting]
	    // CHECK-FIXES: int	b = a;
	  }

       To check	more than one scenario in the same test	file  use  -check-suf-
       fix=SUFFIX-NAME	on  check_clang_tidy.py	 command  line	or -check-suf-
       fixes=SUFFIX-NAME-1,SUFFIX-NAME-2,....	 With	-check-suffix[es]=SUF-
       FIX-NAME	 you  need  to replace your CHECK-* directives with CHECK-MES-
       SAGES-SUFFIX-NAME and CHECK-FIXES-SUFFIX-NAME.

       Here's an example:

	  // RUN: %check_clang_tidy -check-suffix=USING-A %s misc-unused-using-decls %t	-- -- -DUSING_A
	  // RUN: %check_clang_tidy -check-suffix=USING-B %s misc-unused-using-decls %t	-- -- -DUSING_B
	  // RUN: %check_clang_tidy %s misc-unused-using-decls %t
	  ...
	  // CHECK-MESSAGES-USING-A: :[[@LINE-8]]:10: warning: using decl 'A' {{.*}}
	  // CHECK-MESSAGES-USING-B: :[[@LINE-7]]:10: warning: using decl 'B' {{.*}}
	  // CHECK-MESSAGES: :[[@LINE-6]]:10: warning: using decl 'C' {{.*}}
	  // CHECK-FIXES-USING-A-NOT: using a::A;$
	  // CHECK-FIXES-USING-B-NOT: using a::B;$
	  // CHECK-FIXES-NOT: using a::C;$

       There are many dark corners in the C++ language,	and it may  be	diffi-
       cult  to	 make your check work perfectly	in all cases, especially if it
       issues fix-it hints. The	most frequent pitfalls	are  macros  and  tem-
       plates:

       1. code	written	in a macro body/template definition may	have a differ-
	  ent meaning depending	on the macro expansion/template	instantiation;

       2. multiple macro expansions/template instantiations may	result in  the
	  same	code  being  inspected	by the check multiple times (possibly,
	  with different meanings, see 1), and the same	warning	(or a slightly
	  different one) may be	issued by the check multiple times; clang-tidy
	  will deduplicate _identical_	warnings,  but	if  the	 warnings  are
	  slightly  different, all of them will	be shown to the	user (and used
	  for applying fixes, if any);

       3. making replacements to a macro body/template definition may be  fine
	  for  some macro expansions/template instantiations, but easily break
	  some other expansions/instantiations.

       If you need multiple files to exercise all the aspects of  your	check,
       it  is recommended you place them in a subdirectory named for the check
       under the Inputs	directory for the module containing your check.	  This
       keeps the test directory	from getting cluttered.

       If  you	need  to  validate how your check interacts with system	header
       files, a	set of simulated system	header files is	located	in the	check-
       ers/Inputs/Headers  directory.  The path	to this	directory is available
       in a lit	test with the variable %clang_tidy_headers.

   Out-of-tree check plugins
       Developing an out-of-tree check as a plugin largely follows  the	 steps
       outlined	above. The plugin is a shared library whose code lives outside
       the clang-tidy build system. Build and link this	shared library against
       LLVM as done for	other kinds of Clang plugins.

       The  plugin can be loaded by passing -load to clang-tidy	in addition to
       the names of the	checks to enable.

	  $ clang-tidy --checks=-*,my-explicit-constructor -list-checks	-load myplugin.so

       There is	no expectations	regarding ABI and API stability, so the	plugin
       must be compiled	against	the version of clang-tidy that will be loading
       the plugin.

       The plugins can use threads, TLS, or any	other facilities available  to
       in-tree code which is accessible	from the external headers.

   Running clang-tidy on LLVM
       To test a check it's best to try	it out on a larger code	base. LLVM and
       Clang  are  the	natural	 targets  as  you already have the source code
       around. The most	convenient way to run clang-tidy  is  with  a  compile
       command	database; CMake	can automatically generate one,	for a descrip-
       tion of how to enable it	see How	To Setup Clang Tooling For LLVM.  Once
       compile_commands.json  is  in place and a working version of clang-tidy
       is  in	PATH   the   entire   code   base   can	  be   analyzed	  with
       clang-tidy/tool/run-clang-tidy.py.  The script executes clang-tidy with
       the default set of checks on every translation unit in the compile com-
       mand database and displays  the	resulting  warnings  and  errors.  The
       script provides multiple	configuration flags.

        The  default  set of checks can be overridden using the -checks argu-
	 ment, taking the identical format as  clang-tidy  does.  For  example
	 -checks=-*,modernize-use-override will	run the	modernize-use-override
	 check only.

        To  restrict the files	examined you can provide one or	more regex ar-
	 guments that the file names are matched  against.   run-clang-tidy.py
	 clang-tidy/.*Check\.cpp  will	only analyze clang-tidy	checks.	It may
	 also be necessary to restrict the header files	that warnings are dis-
	 played	from using the -header-filter flag. It has the	same  behavior
	 as the	corresponding clang-tidy flag.

        To  apply  suggested  fixes  -fix  can	be passed as an	argument. This
	 gathers all changes in	a temporary directory and applies them.	 Pass-
	 ing -format will run clang-format over	changed	lines.

   On checks profiling
       clang-tidy can collect per-check	profiling info,	and output it for each
       processed source	file (translation unit).

       To  enable profiling info collection, use the -enable-check-profile ar-
       gument.	The timings will be output to stderr as	a table. Example  out-
       put:

	  $ clang-tidy -enable-check-profile -checks=-*,readability-function-size source.cpp
	  ===-------------------------------------------------------------------------===
				    clang-tidy checks profiling
	  ===-------------------------------------------------------------------------===
	    Total Execution Time: 1.0282 seconds (1.0258 wall clock)

	     ---User Time---   --System	Time--	 --User+System--   ---Wall Time---  ---	Name ---
	     0.9136 (100.0%)   0.1146 (100.0%)	 1.0282	(100.0%)   1.0258 (100.0%)  readability-function-size
	     0.9136 (100.0%)   0.1146 (100.0%)	 1.0282	(100.0%)   1.0258 (100.0%)  Total

       It can also store that data as JSON files for further processing. Exam-
       ple output:

	  $ clang-tidy -enable-check-profile -store-check-profile=. -checks=-*,readability-function-size source.cpp
	  $ # Note that	there won't be timings table printed to	the console.
	  $ ls /tmp/out/
	  20180516161318717446360-source.cpp.json
	  $ cat	20180516161318717446360-source.cpp.json
	  {
	  "file": "/path/to/source.cpp",
	  "timestamp": "2018-05-16 16:13:18.717446360",
	  "profile": {
	    "time.clang-tidy.readability-function-size.wall": 1.0421266555786133e+00,
	    "time.clang-tidy.readability-function-size.user": 9.2088400000005421e-01,
	    "time.clang-tidy.readability-function-size.sys": 1.2418899999999974e-01
	  }
	  }

       There is	only one argument that controls	profile	storage:

        -store-check-profile=<prefix>

	 By  default  reports  are printed in tabulated	format to stderr. When
	 this option is	passed,	these per-TU profiles are  instead  stored  as
	 JSON.	 If the	prefix is not an absolute path,	it is considered to be
	 relative to the directory from	where you have run clang-tidy.	All  .
	 and  ..   patterns  in	 the  path are collapsed, and symlinks are re-
	 solved.

	 Example: Let's	suppose	you have a source file named example.cpp,  lo-
	 cated	in the /source directory. Only the input filename is used, not
	 the full path to the source file. Additionally, it is	prefixed  with
	 the current timestamp.

	  If  you specify -store-check-profile=/tmp, then the profile will be
	   saved to /tmp/<ISO8601-like timestamp>-example.cpp.json

	  If you run clang-tidy  from	within	/foo  directory,  and  specify
	   -store-check-profile=.,  then  the  profile	will still be saved to
	   /foo/<ISO8601-like timestamp>-example.cpp.json

       clang-tidy is a clang-based C++ "linter"	tool. Its purpose is  to  pro-
       vide an extensible framework for	diagnosing and fixing typical program-
       ming  errors, like style	violations, interface misuse, or bugs that can
       be deduced via static analysis. clang-tidy is modular  and  provides  a
       convenient interface for	writing	new checks.

   Using clang-tidy
       clang-tidy  is a	LibTooling-based tool, and it's	easier to work with if
       you set up a compile command database for your project (for an  example
       of  how	to  do	this, see How To Setup Tooling For LLVM). You can also
       specify compilation options on the command line after --:

	  $ clang-tidy test.cpp	-- -Imy_project/include	-DMY_DEFINES ...

       clang-tidy has its own checks and can also run  Clang  Static  Analyzer
       checks. Each check has a	name and the checks to run can be chosen using
       the -checks= option, which specifies a comma-separated list of positive
       and  negative  (prefixed	 with  -) globs. Positive globs	add subsets of
       checks, and negative globs remove them. For example,

	  $ clang-tidy test.cpp	-checks=-*,clang-analyzer-*,-clang-analyzer-cplusplus*

       will disable all	default	checks (-*) and	 enable	 all  clang-analyzer-*
       checks except for clang-analyzer-cplusplus* ones.

       The -list-checks	option lists all the enabled checks. When used without
       -checks=,  it shows checks enabled by default. Use -checks=* to see all
       available checks	or with	any other  value  of  -checks=	to  see	 which
       checks are enabled by this value.

       There are currently the following groups	of checks:
		+--------------------+----------------------------+
		| Name prefix	     | Description		  |
		+--------------------+----------------------------+
		| abseil-	     | Checks  related	to Abseil |
		|		     | library.			  |
		+--------------------+----------------------------+
		| altera-	     | Checks related  to  OpenCL |
		|		     | programming for FPGAs.	  |
		+--------------------+----------------------------+
		| android-	     | Checks related to Android. |
		+--------------------+----------------------------+
		| boost-	     | Checks  related	to  Boost |
		|		     | library.			  |
		+--------------------+----------------------------+
		| bugprone-	     | Checks	  that	   target |
		|		     | bug-prone code constructs. |
		+--------------------+----------------------------+
		| cert-		     | Checks related to CERT Se- |
		|		     | cure Coding Guidelines.	  |
		+--------------------+----------------------------+
		| clang-analyzer-    | Clang	Static	 Analyzer |
		|		     | checks.			  |
		+--------------------+----------------------------+
		| concurrency-	     | Checks related to  concur- |
		|		     | rent  programming (includ- |
		|		     | ing    threads,	  fibers, |
		|		     | coroutines, etc.).	  |
		+--------------------+----------------------------+
		| cppcoreguidelines- | Checks related to C++ Core |
		|		     | Guidelines.		  |
		+--------------------+----------------------------+
		| darwin-	     | Checks  related	to Darwin |
		|		     | coding conventions.	  |
		+--------------------+----------------------------+
		| fuchsia-	     | Checks related to  Fuchsia |
		|		     | coding conventions.	  |
		+--------------------+----------------------------+
		| google-	     | Checks  related	to Google |
		|		     | coding conventions.	  |
		+--------------------+----------------------------+
		| hicpp-	     | Checks related to High In- |
		|		     | tegrity C++  Coding  Stan- |
		|		     | dard.			  |
		+--------------------+----------------------------+
		| linuxkernel-	     | Checks	related	  to  the |
		|		     | Linux Kernel  coding  con- |
		|		     | ventions.		  |
		+--------------------+----------------------------+
		| llvm-		     | Checks related to the LLVM |
		|		     | coding conventions.	  |
		+--------------------+----------------------------+
		| llvmlibc-	     | Checks	related	  to  the |
		|		     | LLVM-libc   coding   stan- |
		|		     | dards.			  |
		+--------------------+----------------------------+
		| misc-		     | Checks that we didn't have |
		|		     | a better	category for.	  |
		+--------------------+----------------------------+
		| modernize-	     | Checks that advocate usage |
		|		     | of modern (currently "mod- |
		|		     | ern"  means  "C++11") lan- |
		|		     | guage constructs.	  |
		+--------------------+----------------------------+
		| mpi-		     | Checks  related	 to   MPI |
		|		     | (Message	  Passing  Inter- |
		|		     | face).			  |
		+--------------------+----------------------------+
		| objc-		     | Checks related  to  Objec- |
		|		     | tive-C coding conventions. |
		+--------------------+----------------------------+
		| openmp-	     | Checks  related	to OpenMP |
		|		     | API.			  |
		+--------------------+----------------------------+
		| performance-	     | Checks that target perfor- |
		|		     | mance-related issues.	  |
		+--------------------+----------------------------+
		| portability-	     | Checks that target  porta- |
		|		     | bility-related issues that |
		|		     | don't  relate  to any par- |
		|		     | ticular coding style.	  |
		+--------------------+----------------------------+
		| readability-	     | Checks that  target  read- |
		|		     | ability-related	   issues |
		|		     | that don't relate  to  any |
		|		     | particular coding style.	  |
		+--------------------+----------------------------+
		| zircon-	     | Checks  related	to Zircon |
		|		     | kernel coding conventions. |
		+--------------------+----------------------------+

       Clang diagnostics are treated in	a similar way  as  check  diagnostics.
       Clang  diagnostics  are displayed by clang-tidy and can be filtered out
       using the -checks= option. However, the -checks=	option does not	affect
       compilation arguments, so it cannot turn	on Clang  warnings  which  are
       not  already turned on in the build configuration. The -warnings-as-er-
       rors= option upgrades any warnings emitted under	the -checks=  flag  to
       errors (but it does not enable any checks itself).

       Clang  diagnostics  have	 check	names starting with clang-diagnostic-.
       Diagnostics which  have	a  corresponding  warning  option,  are	 named
       clang-diagnostic-<warning-option>,  e.g.	 Clang	warning	 controlled by
       -Wliteral-conversion will be reported with  check  name	clang-diagnos-
       tic-literal-conversion.

       The  -fix flag instructs	clang-tidy to fix found	errors if supported by
       corresponding checks.

       An overview of all the command-line options:

	  $ clang-tidy --help
	  USAGE: clang-tidy [options] <source0>	[... <sourceN>]

	  OPTIONS:

	  Generic Options:

	    --help			   - Display available options (--help-hidden for more)
	    --help-list			   - Display list of available options (--help-list-hidden for more)
	    --version			   - Display the version of this program

	  clang-tidy options:

	    --checks=<string>		   -
					     Comma-separated list of globs with	optional '-'
					     prefix. Globs are processed in order of
					     appearance	in the list. Globs without '-'
					     prefix add	checks with matching names to the
					     set, globs	with the '-' prefix remove checks
					     with matching names from the set of enabled
					     checks. This option's value is appended to	the
					     value of the 'Checks' option in .clang-tidy
					     file, if any.
	    --config=<string>		   -
					     Specifies a configuration in YAML/JSON format:
					       -config="{Checks: '*',
							 CheckOptions: {x, y}}"
					     When the value is empty, clang-tidy will
					     attempt to	find a file named .clang-tidy for
					     each source file in its parent directories.
	    --config-file=<string>	   -
					    Specify the	path of	.clang-tidy or custom config file:
					      e.g. --config-file=/some/path/myTidyConfigFile
					    This option	internally works exactly the same way as
					      --config option after reading specified config file.
					    Use	either --config-file or	--config, not both.
	    --dump-config		   -
					     Dumps configuration in the	YAML format to
					     stdout. This option can be	used along with	a
					     file name (and '--' if the	file is	outside	of a
					     project with configured compilation database).
					     The configuration used for	this file will be
					     printed.
					     Use along with -checks=* to include
					     configuration of all checks.
	    --enable-check-profile	   -
					     Enable per-check timing profiles, and print a
					     report to stderr.
	    --explain-config		   -
					     For each enabled check explains, where it is
					     enabled, i.e. in clang-tidy binary, command
					     line or a specific	configuration file.
	    --export-fixes=<filename>	   -
					     YAML file to store	suggested fixes	in. The
					     stored fixes can be applied to the	input source
					     code with clang-apply-replacements.
	    --extra-arg=<string>	   - Additional	argument to append to the compiler command line.
					     Can be used several times.
	    --extra-arg-before=<string>	   - Additional	argument to prepend to the compiler command line.
					     Can be used several times.
	    --fix			   -
					     Apply suggested fixes. Without -fix-errors
					     clang-tidy	will bail out if any compilation
					     errors were found.
	    --fix-errors		   -
					     Apply suggested fixes even	if compilation
					     errors were found.	If compiler errors have
					     attached fix-its, clang-tidy will apply them as
					     well.
	    --fix-notes			   -
					     If	a warning has no fix, but a single fix can
					     be	found through an associated diagnostic note,
					     apply the fix.
					     Specifying	this flag will implicitly enable the
					     '--fix' flag.
	    --format-style=<string>	   -
					     Style for formatting code around applied fixes:
					       - 'none'	(default) turns	off formatting
					       - 'file'	(literally 'file', not a placeholder)
						 uses .clang-format file in the	closest	parent
						 directory
					       - '{ <json> }' specifies	options	inline,	e.g.
						 -format-style='{BasedOnStyle: llvm, IndentWidth: 8}'
					       - 'llvm', 'google', 'webkit', 'mozilla'
					     See clang-format documentation for	the up-to-date
					     information about formatting styles and options.
					     This option overrides the 'FormatStyle` option in
					     .clang-tidy file, if any.
	    --header-filter=<string>	   -
					     Regular expression	matching the names of the
					     headers to	output diagnostics from. Diagnostics
					     from the main file	of each	translation unit are
					     always displayed.
					     Can be used together with -line-filter.
					     This option overrides the 'HeaderFilterRegex'
					     option in .clang-tidy file, if any.
	    --line-filter=<string>	   -
					     List of files with	line ranges to filter the
					     warnings. Can be used together with
					     -header-filter. The format	of the list is a
					     JSON array	of objects:
					       [
						 {"name":"file1.cpp","lines":[[1,3],[5,7]]},
						 {"name":"file2.h"}
					       ]
	    --list-checks		   -
					     List all enabled checks and exit. Use with
					     -checks=* to list all available checks.
	    -load=<plugin>		   -
					     Load the dynamic object ``plugin``. This
					     object should register new	static analyzer
					     or	clang-tidy passes. Once	loaded,	the
					     object will add new command line options
					     to	run various analyses. To see the new
					     complete list of passes, use the
					     :option:`--list-checks` and
					     :option:`-load` options together.
	    -p <string>			   - Build path
	    --quiet			   -
					     Run clang-tidy in quiet mode. This	suppresses
					     printing statistics about ignored warnings	and
					     warnings treated as errors	if the respective
					     options are specified.
	    --store-check-profile=<prefix> -
					     By	default	reports	are printed in tabulated
					     format to stderr. When this option	is passed,
					     these per-TU profiles are instead stored as JSON.
	    --system-headers		   - Display the errors	from system headers.
	    --use-color			   -
					    Use	colors in diagnostics. If not set, colors
					    will be used if the	terminal connected to
					    standard output supports colors.
					    This option	overrides the 'UseColor' option	in
					    .clang-tidy	file, if any.
	    --verify-config		   -
					     Check the config files to ensure each check and
					     option is recognized.
	    --vfsoverlay=<filename>	   -
					     Overlay the virtual filesystem described by file
					     over the real file	system.
	    --warnings-as-errors=<string>  -
					     Upgrades warnings to errors. Same format as
					     '-checks'.
					     This option's value is appended to	the value of
					     the 'WarningsAsErrors' option in .clang-tidy
					     file, if any.

	  -p <build-path> is used to read a compile command database.

		  For example, it can be a CMake build directory in which a file named
		  compile_commands.json	exists (use -DCMAKE_EXPORT_COMPILE_COMMANDS=ON
		  CMake	option to get this output). When no build path is specified,
		  a search for compile_commands.json will be attempted through all
		  parent paths of the first input file . See:
		  https://clang.llvm.org/docs/HowToSetupToolingForLLVM.html for	an
		  example of setting up	Clang Tooling on a source tree.

	  <source0> ...	specify	the paths of source files. These paths are
		  looked up in the compile command database. If	the path of a file is
		  absolute, it needs to	point into CMake's source tree.	If the path is
		  relative, the	current	working	directory needs	to be in the CMake
		  source tree and the file must	be in a	subdirectory of	the current
		  working directory. "./" prefixes in the relative files will be
		  automatically	removed, but the rest of a relative path must be a
		  suffix of a path in the compile command database.

	  Configuration	files:
	    clang-tidy attempts	to read	configuration for each source file from	a
	    .clang-tidy	file located in	the closest parent directory of	the source
	    file. If InheritParentConfig is true in a config file, the configuration file
	    in the parent directory (if	any exists) will be taken and current config file
	    will be applied on top of the parent one. If any configuration options have
	    a corresponding command-line option, command-line option takes precedence.
	    The	effective configuration	can be inspected using -dump-config:

	      $	clang-tidy -dump-config
	      ---
	      Checks:		   '-*,some-check'
	      WarningsAsErrors:	   ''
	      HeaderFilterRegex:   ''
	      FormatStyle:	   none
	      InheritParentConfig: true
	      User:		   user
	      CheckOptions:
		some-check.SomeOption: 'some value'
	      ...

   Suppressing Undesired Diagnostics
       clang-tidy diagnostics are intended to call out code that does not  ad-
       here  to	 a  coding  standard, or is otherwise problematic in some way.
       However,	if the code is known to	be correct, it may be  useful  to  si-
       lence the warning.  Some	clang-tidy checks provide a check-specific way
       to  silence  the	 diagnostics,  e.g. bugprone-use-after-move can	be si-
       lenced by re-initializing the variable after it	has  been  moved  out,
       bugprone-string-integer-assignment  can	be  suppressed	by  explicitly
       casting the integer to char,  readability-implicit-bool-conversion  can
       also be suppressed by using explicit casts, etc.

       If  a  specific	suppression  mechanism	is not available for a certain
       warning,	or its use is not desired for some reason,  clang-tidy	has  a
       generic mechanism to suppress diagnostics using NOLINT, NOLINTNEXTLINE,
       and NOLINTBEGIN ... NOLINTEND comments.

       The  NOLINT comment instructs clang-tidy	to ignore warnings on the same
       line (it	doesn't	apply to a function, a block of	code or	any other lan-
       guage construct;	it applies to the line of code it is on). If introduc-
       ing the comment on the same line	would change the formatting in an  un-
       desired	way,  the NOLINTNEXTLINE comment allows	suppressing clang-tidy
       warnings	on the next line. The NOLINTBEGIN and NOLINTEND	comments allow
       suppressing clang-tidy warnings on multiple lines (affecting all	 lines
       between the two comments).

       All  comments  can  be  followed	 by an optional	list of	check names in
       parentheses (see	below for the formal syntax). The list of check	 names
       supports	 globbing,  with the same format and semantics as for enabling
       checks. Note: negative globs are	ignored	here,  as  they	 would	effec-
       tively re-activate the warning.

       For example:

	  class	Foo {
	    // Suppress	all the	diagnostics for	the line
	    Foo(int param); // NOLINT

	    // Consider	explaining the motivation to suppress the warning
	    Foo(char param); //	NOLINT:	Allow implicit conversion from `char`, because <some valid reason>

	    // Silence only the	specified checks for the line
	    Foo(double param); // NOLINT(google-explicit-constructor, google-runtime-int)

	    // Silence all checks from the `google` module
	    Foo(bool param); //	NOLINT(google*)

	    // Silence all checks ending with `-avoid-c-arrays`
	    int	array[10]; // NOLINT(*-avoid-c-arrays)

	    // Silence only the	specified diagnostics for the next line
	    // NOLINTNEXTLINE(google-explicit-constructor, google-runtime-int)
	    Foo(bool param);

	    // Silence all checks from the `google` module for the next	line
	    // NOLINTNEXTLINE(google*)
	    Foo(bool param);

	    // Silence all checks ending with `-avoid-c-arrays`	for the	next line
	    // NOLINTNEXTLINE(*-avoid-c-arrays)
	    int	array[10];

	    // Silence only the	specified checks for all lines between the BEGIN and END
	    // NOLINTBEGIN(google-explicit-constructor,	google-runtime-int)
	    Foo(short param);
	    Foo(long param);
	    // NOLINTEND(google-explicit-constructor, google-runtime-int)

	    // Silence all checks from the `google` module for all lines between the BEGIN and END
	    // NOLINTBEGIN(google*)
	    Foo(bool param);
	    // NOLINTEND(google*)

	    // Silence all checks ending with `-avoid-c-arrays`	for all	lines between the BEGIN	and END
	    // NOLINTBEGIN(*-avoid-c-arrays)
	    int	array[10];
	    // NOLINTEND(*-avoid-c-arrays)
	  };

       The  formal  syntax of NOLINT, NOLINTNEXTLINE, and NOLINTBEGIN ...  NO-
       LINTEND is the following:

	  lint-comment:
	    lint-command
	    lint-command lint-args

	  lint-args:
	    ( check-name-list )

	  check-name-list:
	    check-name
	    check-name-list , check-name

	  lint-command:
	    NOLINT
	    NOLINTNEXTLINE
	    NOLINTBEGIN
	    NOLINTEND

       Note that whitespaces between  NOLINT/NOLINTNEXTLINE/NOLINTBEGIN/NOLIN-
       TEND and	the opening parenthesis	are not	allowed	(in this case the com-
       ment  will  be treated just as NOLINT/NOLINTNEXTLINE/NOLINTBEGIN/NOLIN-
       TEND), whereas in the check names list (inside the parentheses),	white-
       spaces can be used and will be ignored.

       All NOLINTBEGIN comments	must be	paired by an equal number of NOLINTEND
       comments. Moreover, a pair of comments must have	matching arguments  --
       for   example,	NOLINTBEGIN(check-name)	 can  be  paired  with	NOLIN-
       TEND(check-name)	but not	with NOLINTEND (zero  arguments).   clang-tidy
       will  generate  a  clang-tidy-nolint  error diagnostic if any NOLINTBE-
       GIN/NOLINTEND comment violates these requirements.

CLANG-INCLUDE-FIXER
   Contents
        Clang-Include-Fixer

	  Setup

	    Creating a	Symbol Index From a Compilation	Database

	    Integrate with Vim

	    Integrate with Emacs

	  How it Works

       One of the major	nuisances of C++ compared to other  languages  is  the
       manual  management  of  #include	 directives  in	 any  file.  clang-in-
       clude-fixer addresses one aspect	of this	problem	by providing an	 auto-
       mated  way  of  adding  #include	 directives for	missing	symbols	in one
       translation unit.

       While inserting	missing	 #include,  clang-include-fixer	 adds  missing
       namespace  qualifiers to	all instances of an unidentified symbol	if the
       symbol is missing some prefix namespace qualifiers.

   Setup
       To use clang-include-fixer two databases	are required. Both can be gen-
       erated with existing tools.

        Compilation database. Contains	the compiler commands  for  any	 given
	 file  in  a  project  and can be generated by CMake, see How To Setup
	 Tooling For LLVM.

        Symbol	index. Contains	all symbol information in a project to match a
	 given identifier to a header file.

       Ideally	both  databases	  (compile_commands.json   and	 find_all_sym-
       bols_db.yaml)  are  linked into the root	of the source tree they	corre-
       spond to. Then the clang-include-fixer can automatically	pick  them  up
       if  called with a source	file from that tree. Note that by default com-
       pile_commands.json as generated by CMake	does not include header	files,
       so only implementation files can	be handled by tools.

   Creating a Symbol Index From	a Compilation Database
       The include fixer contains find-all-symbols, a tool to create a	symbol
       database	 in  YAML  format  from	 a compilation database	by parsing all
       source files listed in it. The following	list of	commands shows how  to
       set  up	a  database for	LLVM, any project built	by CMake should	follow
       similar steps.

	  $ cd path/to/llvm-build
	  $ ninja find-all-symbols // build find-all-symbols tool.
	  $ ninja clang-include-fixer // build clang-include-fixer tool.
	  $ ls compile_commands.json # Make sure compile_commands.json exists.
	    compile_commands.json
	  $ path/to/llvm/source/clang-tools-extra/clang-include-fixer/find-all-symbols/tool/run-find-all-symbols.py
	    ...	wait as	clang indexes the code base ...
	  $ ln -s $PWD/find_all_symbols_db.yaml	path/to/llvm/source/ # Link database into the source tree.
	  $ ln -s $PWD/compile_commands.json path/to/llvm/source/ # Also link compilation database if it's not there already.
	  $ cd path/to/llvm/source
	  $ /path/to/clang-include-fixer -db=yaml path/to/file/with/missing/include.cpp
	    Added #include "foo.h"

   Integrate with Vim
       To run clang-include-fixer on a potentially unsaved buffer in Vim.  Add
       the following key binding to your .vimrc:

	  noremap <leader>cf :pyf path/to/llvm/source/clang-tools-extra/clang-include-fixer/tool/clang-include-fixer.py<cr>

       This  enables  clang-include-fixer  for	NORMAL and VISUAL mode.	Change
       <leader>cf to another binding if	you need clang-include-fixer on	a dif-
       ferent key. The <leader>	key is a reference to a	specific  key  defined
       by the mapleader	variable and is	bound to backslash by default.

       Make sure vim can find clang-include-fixer:

        Add the path to clang-include-fixer to	the PATH environment variable.

        Or   set   g:clang_include_fixer_path	 in   vimrc:  let  g:clang_in-
	 clude_fixer_path=path/to/clang-include-fixer

       You can customize the number of headers	being  shown  by  setting  let
       g:clang_include_fixer_maximum_suggested_headers=5

       Customized settings in .vimrc:

        let g:clang_include_fixer_path	= "clang-include-fixer"

	 Set clang-include-fixer binary	file path.

        let g:clang_include_fixer_maximum_suggested_headers = 3

	 Set the maximum number	of #includes to	show. Default is 3.

        let g:clang_include_fixer_increment_num = 5

	 Set  the increment number of #includes	to show	every time when	press-
	 ing m.	 Default is 5.

        let g:clang_include_fixer_jump_to_include = 0

	 Set to	1 if you want to jump to the new inserted #include  line.  De-
	 fault is 0.

        let g:clang_include_fixer_query_mode =	0

	 Set to	1 if you want to insert	#include for the symbol	under the cur-
	 sor.	Default	 is  0.	Compared to normal mode, this mode won't parse
	 the source file and only search the symbol from  database,  which  is
	 faster	than normal mode.

       See clang-include-fixer.py for more details.

   Integrate with Emacs
       To  run	clang-include-fixer  on	a potentially unsaved buffer in	Emacs.
       Ensure that Emacs finds clang-include-fixer.el by adding	the  directory
       containing  the	file  to  the  load-path  and  requiring the clang-in-
       clude-fixer in your .emacs:

	  (add-to-list 'load-path "path/to/llvm/source/clang-tools-extra/clang-include-fixer/tool/"
	  (require 'clang-include-fixer)

       Within Emacs the	tool can be invoked with  the  command	M-x  clang-in-
       clude-fixer.  This  will	insert the header that defines the first unde-
       fined symbol; if	there is more than one header that  would  define  the
       symbol, the user	is prompted to select one.

       To  include  the	 header	 that  defines	the  symbol  at	point, run M-x
       clang-include-fixer-at-point.

       Make sure Emacs can find	clang-include-fixer:

        Either	add the	parent directory of clang-include-fixer	 to  the  PATH
	 environment  variable,	 or  customize the Emacs user option clang-in-
	 clude-fixer-executable	to point to the	file name of the program.

   How it Works
       To get the most information out	of  Clang  at  parse  time,  clang-in-
       clude-fixer  runs  in tandem with the parse and receives	callbacks from
       Clang's semantic	analysis. In particular	it reuses the existing support
       for typo	corrections. Whenever Clang tries to correct a potential  typo
       it  emits a callback to the include fixer which then looks for a	corre-
       sponding	file. At this point rich lookup	information  is	 still	avail-
       able, which is not available in the AST at a later stage.

       The  identifier that should be typo corrected is	then sent to the data-
       base, if	a header file is returned it is	added as an include  directive
       at the top of the file.

       Currently  clang-include-fixer  only inserts a single include at	a time
       to avoid	getting	caught in follow-up errors. If multiple	#include addi-
       tions are desired the  program  can  be	rerun  until  a	 fix-point  is
       reached.

MODULARIZE USER'S MANUAL
   Modularize Usage
       modularize  [<modularize-options>] [<module-map>|<include-files-list>]*
       [<front-end-options>...]

       <modularize-options> is a place-holder for options specific to modular-
       ize, which are described	below in Modularize Command Line Options.

       <module-map> specifies the path of a file name for an  existing	module
       map.  The module	map must be well-formed	in terms of syntax. Modularize
       will extract the	header file names from the map.	 Only  normal  headers
       are checked, assuming headers marked "private", "textual", or "exclude"
       are  not	to be checked as a top-level include, assuming they either are
       included	by other headers which are checked, or they are	 not  suitable
       for modules.

       <include-files-list>  specifies the path	of a file name for a file con-
       taining the newline-separated list of headers to	check with respect  to
       each  other.  Lines  beginning  with  '#'  and empty lines are ignored.
       Header file names followed by a colon and  other	 space-separated  file
       names  will  include  those extra files as dependencies.	The file names
       can be relative or full paths, but must be on the same line. For	 exam-
       ple:

	  header1.h
	  header2.h
	  header3.h: header1.h header2.h

       Note  that  unless a -prefix (header path) option is specified, non-ab-
       solute file paths in the	header list  file  will	 be  relative  to  the
       header  list  file directory. Use -prefix to specify a different	direc-
       tory.

       <front-end-options> is a	place-holder for regular Clang front-end argu-
       ments, which must follow	the <include-files-list>.  Note	 that  by  de-
       fault,  modularize  assumes  .h files contain C++ source, so if you are
       using a different language, you might need to use a -x option  to  tell
       Clang that the header contains another language,	i.e.:  -x c

       Note  also  that	 because modularize does not use the clang driver, you
       will likely need	to pass	in additional compiler front-end arguments  to
       match those passed in by	default	by the driver.

   Modularize Command Line Options
       -prefix=<header-path>
	      Prepend  the given path to non-absolute file paths in the	header
	      list file.  By default, headers are assumed to  be  relative  to
	      the header list file directory. Use -prefix to specify a differ-
	      ent directory.

       -module-map-path=<module-map-path>
	      Generate	a  module map and output it to the given file. See the
	      description in Module Map	Generation.

       -problem-files-list=<problem-files-list-file-name>
	      For use only with	module map assistant. Input list of files that
	      have problems with respect to modules. These will	still  be  in-
	      cluded  in  the generated	module map, but	will be	marked as "ex-
	      cluded" headers.

       -root-module=<root-name>
	      Put modules generated by the -module-map-path option in  an  en-
	      closing  module  with  the  given	 name.	See the	description in
	      Module Map Generation.

       -block-check-header-list-only
	      Limit  the  #include-inside-extern-or-namespace-block  check  to
	      only  those  headers explicitly listed in	the header list.  This
	      is a work-around for avoiding error  messages  for  private  in-
	      cludes that purposefully get included inside blocks.

       -no-coverage-check
	      Don't do the coverage check for a	module map.

       -coverage-check-only
	      Only do the coverage check for a module map.

       -display-file-lists
	      Display  lists of	good files (no compile errors),	problem	files,
	      and a combined list with problem files preceded by a '#'.	  This
	      can be used to quickly determine which files have	problems.  The
	      latter combined list might be useful in starting to modularize a
	      set  of  headers.	You can	start with a full list of headers, use
	      -display-file-lists option, and then use the  combined  list  as
	      your  intermediate  list,	 uncommenting-out  headers  as you fix
	      them.

       modularize is a standalone tool that checks whether a  set  of  headers
       provides	 the consistent	definitions required to	use modules. For exam-
       ple, it detects whether the same	entity (say, a NULL  macro  or	size_t
       typedef)	 is  defined  in multiple headers or whether a header produces
       different definitions under different circumstances.  These  conditions
       cause  modules  built  from the headers to behave poorly, and should be
       fixed before introducing	a module map.

       modularize also has an assistant	mode option for	 generating  a	module
       map  file  based	 on  the provided header list. The generated file is a
       functional module map that can be used as a starting point for  a  mod-
       ule.map file.

   Getting Started
       To build	from source:

       1. Read Getting Started with the	LLVM System and	Clang Tools Documenta-
	  tion	for  information on getting sources for	LLVM, Clang, and Clang
	  Extra	Tools.

       2. Getting Started with the LLVM	System and Building  LLVM  with	 CMake
	  give	directions for how to build. With sources all checked out into
	  the right place the LLVM build will  build  Clang  Extra  Tools  and
	  their	dependencies automatically.

	   If	using  CMake,  you can also use	the modularize target to build
	    just the modularize	tool and its dependencies.

       Before continuing, take a look at Modularize Usage to see how to	invoke
       modularize.

   What	Modularize Checks
       Modularize will check for the following:

        Duplicate global type and variable definitions

        Duplicate macro definitions

        Macro instances, 'defined(macro)', or	#if,  #elif,  #ifdef,  #ifndef
	 conditions that evaluate differently in a header

        #include  directives  inside 'extern "C/C++" {}' or 'namespace	(name)
	 {}' blocks

        Module	map header coverage completeness (in the case of a module  map
	 input only)

       Modularize  will	 do  normal C/C++ parsing, reporting normal errors and
       warnings, but will also report special error messages like the  follow-
       ing:

	  error: '(symbol)' defined at multiple	locations:
	     (file):(row):(column)
	     (file):(row):(column)

	  error: header	'(file)' has different contents	depending on how it was	included

       The latter might	be followed by messages	like the following:

	  note:	'(symbol)' in (file) at	(row):(column) not always provided

       Checks  will also be performed for macro	expansions, defined(macro) ex-
       pressions, and preprocessor conditional directives that evaluate	incon-
       sistently, and can produce error	messages like the following:

	   (...)/SubHeader.h:11:5:
	  #if SYMBOL ==	1
	      ^
	  error: Macro instance	'SYMBOL' has different values in this header,
		 depending on how it was included.
	    'SYMBOL' expanded to: '1' with respect to these inclusion paths:
	      (...)/Header1.h
		(...)/SubHeader.h
	  (...)/SubHeader.h:3:9:
	  #define SYMBOL 1
		  ^
	  Macro	defined	here.
	    'SYMBOL' expanded to: '2' with respect to these inclusion paths:
	      (...)/Header2.h
		  (...)/SubHeader.h
	  (...)/SubHeader.h:7:9:
	  #define SYMBOL 2
		  ^
	  Macro	defined	here.

       Checks will also	be performed for '#include' directives that are	nested
       inside 'extern "C/C++" {}' or 'namespace	(name)	{}'  blocks,  and  can
       produce error message like the following:

	  IncludeInExtern.h:2:3:
	  #include "Empty.h"
	  ^
	  error: Include directive within extern "C" {}.
	  IncludeInExtern.h:1:1:
	  extern "C" {
	  ^
	  The "extern "C" {}" block is here.

   Module Map Coverage Check
       The  coverage check uses	the Clang library to read and parse the	module
       map file. Starting at the module	map file directory, or	just  the  in-
       clude  paths,  if specified, it will collect the	names of all the files
       it considers headers (no	extension, .h, or .inc--if you need more, mod-
       ify the isHeader	function). It then compares the	headers	against	 those
       referenced  in  the  module map,	either explicitly named, or implicitly
       named via an umbrella directory or umbrella file, as parsed by the Mod-
       uleMap object.  If headers are found which are not referenced  or  cov-
       ered  by	 an  umbrella directory	or file, warning messages will be pro-
       duced, and this program will return an error code of 1. If no  problems
       are found, an error code	of 0 is	returned.

       Note  that  in the case of umbrella headers, this tool invokes the com-
       piler to	preprocess the file, and uses a	callback to collect the	header
       files included by the umbrella header or	any of its nested includes. If
       any front end options are needed	for these compiler invocations,	 these
       can be included on the command line after the module map	file argument.

       Warning message have the	form:
	  warning: module.modulemap does not account for file: Level3A.h

       Note  that  for the case	of the module map referencing a	file that does
       not exist, the module map parser	in Clang will (at  the	time  of  this
       writing)	display	an error message.

       To  limit  the  checks  modularize does to just the module map coverage
       check, use the -coverage-check-only option.

       For example:

	  modularize -coverage-check-only module.modulemap

   Module Map Generation
       If you specify the -module-map-path=<module map file>, modularize  will
       output  a  module map based on the input	header list.  A	module will be
       created for each	header.	Also, if the header in the header  list	 is  a
       partial path, a nested module hierarchy will be created in which	a mod-
       ule will	be created for each subdirectory component in the header path,
       with  the  header  itself represented by	the innermost module. If other
       headers use the same subdirectories, they will  be  enclosed  in	 these
       same modules also.

       For example, for	the header list:

	  SomeTypes.h
	  SomeDecls.h
	  SubModule1/Header1.h
	  SubModule1/Header2.h
	  SubModule2/Header3.h
	  SubModule2/Header4.h
	  SubModule2.h

       The following module map	will be	generated:

	  // Output/NoProblemsAssistant.txt
	  // Generated by: modularize -module-map-path=Output/NoProblemsAssistant.txt \
	       -root-module=Root NoProblemsAssistant.modularize

	  module SomeTypes {
	    header "SomeTypes.h"
	    export *
	  }
	  module SomeDecls {
	    header "SomeDecls.h"
	    export *
	  }
	  module SubModule1 {
	    module Header1 {
	      header "SubModule1/Header1.h"
	      export *
	    }
	    module Header2 {
	      header "SubModule1/Header2.h"
	      export *
	    }
	  }
	  module SubModule2 {
	    module Header3 {
	      header "SubModule2/Header3.h"
	      export *
	    }
	    module Header4 {
	      header "SubModule2/Header4.h"
	      export *
	    }
	    header "SubModule2.h"
	    export *
	  }

       An optional -root-module=<root-name> option can be used to cause	a root
       module to be created which encloses all the modules.

       An  optional -problem-files-list=<problem-file-name> can	be used	to in-
       put a list of files to be excluded, perhaps  as	a  temporary  stop-gap
       measure until problem headers can be fixed.

       For example, with the same header list from above:

	  // Output/NoProblemsAssistant.txt
	  // Generated by: modularize -module-map-path=Output/NoProblemsAssistant.txt \
	       -root-module=Root NoProblemsAssistant.modularize

	  module Root {
	    module SomeTypes {
	      header "SomeTypes.h"
	      export *
	    }
	    module SomeDecls {
	      header "SomeDecls.h"
	      export *
	    }
	    module SubModule1 {
	      module Header1 {
		header "SubModule1/Header1.h"
		export *
	      }
	      module Header2 {
		header "SubModule1/Header2.h"
		export *
	      }
	    }
	    module SubModule2 {
	      module Header3 {
		header "SubModule2/Header3.h"
		export *
	      }
	      module Header4 {
		header "SubModule2/Header4.h"
		export *
	      }
	      header "SubModule2.h"
	      export *
	    }
	  }

       Note  that  headers  with dependents will be ignored with a warning, as
       the Clang module	mechanism doesn't support headers the  rely  on	 other
       headers to be included first.

       The module map format defines some keywords which can't be used in mod-
       ule names. If a header has one of these names, an underscore ('_') will
       be  prepended to	the name. For example, if the header name is header.h,
       because header is a keyword, the	module name will be  _header.	For  a
       list of the module map keywords,	please see: Lexical structure

PP-TRACE USER'S	MANUAL
       pp-trace	 is  a standalone tool that traces preprocessor	activity. It's
       also used as a test of Clang's PPCallbacks interface.  It runs a	 given
       source  file through the	Clang preprocessor, displaying selected	infor-
       mation from callback functions overridden in a PPCallbacks  derivation.
       The output is in	a high-level YAML format, described in pp-trace	Output
       Format.

   pp-trace Usage
   Command Line	Format
       pp-trace	[<pp-trace-options>] <source-file> [-- <front-end-options>]

       <pp-trace-options>  is a	place-holder for options specific to pp-trace,
       which are described below in Command Line Options.

       <source-file> specifies the source file to run through  the  preproces-
       sor.

       <front-end-options>  is	a  place-holder	for regular Clang Compiler Op-
       tions, which must follow	the <source-file>.

   Command Line	Options
       -callbacks <comma-separated-globs>
	      This option specifies a comma-separated list of globs describing
	      the list of callbacks that should	be traced. Globs are processed
	      in order of appearance.  Positive	globs add matched callbacks to
	      the set, netative	globs  (those  with  the  '-'  prefix)	remove
	      callacks from the	set.

	      	FileChanged

	      	FileSkipped

	      	InclusionDirective

	      	moduleImport

	      	EndOfMainFile

	      	Ident

	      	PragmaDirective

	      	PragmaComment

	      	PragmaDetectMismatch

	      	PragmaDebug

	      	PragmaMessage

	      	PragmaDiagnosticPush

	      	PragmaDiagnosticPop

	      	PragmaDiagnostic

	      	PragmaOpenCLExtension

	      	PragmaWarning

	      	PragmaWarningPush

	      	PragmaWarningPop

	      	MacroExpands

	      	MacroDefined

	      	MacroUndefined

	      	Defined

	      	SourceRangeSkipped

	      	If

	      	Elif

	      	Ifdef

	      	Ifndef

	      	Else

	      	Endif

       -output <output-file>
	      By  default,  pp-trace  outputs the trace	information to stdout.
	      Use this option to output	the trace information to a file.

   pp-trace Output Format
       The pp-trace output is formatted	as  YAML.  See	https://yaml.org/  for
       general	YAML  information.  It's arranged as a sequence	of information
       about the callback call,	including the callback name and	 argument  in-
       formation, for example::

	  ---
	  - Callback: Name
	    Argument1: Value1
	    Argument2: Value2
	  (etc.)
	  ...

       With real data::

	  ---
	  - Callback: FileChanged
	    Loc: "c:/Clang/llvm/clang-tools-extra/test/pp-trace/pp-trace-include.cpp:1:1"
	    Reason: EnterFile
	    FileType: C_User
	    PrevFID: (invalid)
	    (etc.)
	  - Callback: FileChanged
	    Loc: "D:/Clang/llvm/clang-tools-extra/test/pp-trace/pp-trace-include.cpp:5:1"
	    Reason: ExitFile
	    FileType: C_User
	    PrevFID: "D:/Clang/llvm/clang-tools-extra/test/pp-trace/Input/Level1B.h"
	  - Callback: EndOfMainFile
	  ...

       In  all	but  one case (MacroDirective) the "Argument" scalars have the
       same name as the	argument in  the  corresponding	 PPCallbacks  callback
       function.

   Callback Details
       The  following sections describe	the purpose and	output format for each
       callback.

       Click on	the callback name in the section heading to  see  the  Doxygen
       documentation for the callback.

       The  argument descriptions table	describes the callback argument	infor-
       mation displayed.

       The Argument Name field in most (but not	all) cases is the same name as
       the callback function parameter.

       The Argument Value Syntax field describes the values that will be  dis-
       played  for  the	 argument value. It uses an ad hoc representation that
       mixes literal and symbolic representations. Enumeration member  symbols
       are  shown as the actual	enum member in a (member1|member2|...) form. A
       name in parentheses can either represent	a place	 holder	 for  the  de-
       scribed	value,	or confusingly,	it might be a literal, such as (null),
       for a null pointer.  Locations are shown	as quoted only to  avoid  con-
       fusing the documentation	generator.

       The  Clang C++ Type field is the	type from the callback function	decla-
       ration.

       The description describes the argument or what is displayed for it.

       Note that in some cases,	such as	when a structure pointer is  an	 argu-
       ment  value, only some key member or members are	shown to represent the
       value, instead of trying	to display all members of the structure.

   FileChanged Callback
       FileChanged is called when the preprocessor enters  or  exits  a	 file,
       both  the top level file	being compiled,	as well	as any #include	direc-
       tives. It will also be called as	a result of a system header pragma  or
       in internal renaming of a file.

       Argument	descriptions:
   +---------------+-----------------------+------------------+------------------+
   | Argument Name | Argument	Value	   | Clang C++ Type   |	Description	 |
   |		   | Syntax		   |		      |			 |
   +---------------+-----------------------+------------------+------------------+
   | Loc	   | "(file):(line):(col)" | SourceLocation   |	The location  of |
   |		   |			   |		      |	the directive.	 |
   +---------------+-----------------------+------------------+------------------+
   | Reason	   | (EnterFile|Exit-	   | PPCall-	      |	Reason	     for |
   |		   | File|SystemHeader-	   | backs::FileChan- |	change.		 |
   |		   | Pragma|RenameFile)	   | geReason	      |			 |
   +---------------+-----------------------+------------------+------------------+
   | FileType	   | (C_User|C_Sys-	   | SrcMgr::Charac-  |	Include	type.	 |
   |		   | tem|C_ExternCSystem)  | teristicKind     |			 |
   +---------------+-----------------------+------------------+------------------+
   | PrevFID	   | ((file)|(invalid))	   | FileID	      |	Previous   file, |
   |		   |			   |		      |	if any.		 |
   +---------------+-----------------------+------------------+------------------+

       Example::

	  - Callback: FileChanged
	    Loc: "D:/Clang/llvm/clang-tools-extra/test/pp-trace/pp-trace-include.cpp:1:1"
	    Reason: EnterFile
	    FileType: C_User
	    PrevFID: (invalid)

   FileSkipped Callback
       FileSkipped  is	called	when a source file is skipped as the result of
       header guard optimization.

       Argument	descriptions:
      +---------------+------------------+-----------------+------------------+
      |	Argument Name |	Argument   Value | Clang C++ Type  | Description      |
      |		      |	Syntax		 |		   |		      |
      +---------------+------------------+-----------------+------------------+
      |	ParentFile    |	("(file)"     or | const FileEntry | The  file	 that |
      |		      |	(null))		 |		   | #included	  the |
      |		      |			 |		   | skipped file.    |
      +---------------+------------------+-----------------+------------------+
      |	FilenameTok   |	(token)		 | const Token	   | The   token   in |
      |		      |			 |		   | ParentFile	 that |
      |		      |			 |		   | indicates	  the |
      |		      |			 |		   | skipped file.    |
      +---------------+------------------+-----------------+------------------+
      |	FileType      |	(C_User|C_Sys-	 | SrcMgr::Charac- | The file type.   |
      |		      |	tem|C_ExternC-	 | teristicKind	   |		      |
      |		      |	System)		 |		   |		      |
      +---------------+------------------+-----------------+------------------+

       Example::

	  - Callback: FileSkipped
	    ParentFile:	"/path/filename.h"
	    FilenameTok: "filename.h"
	    FileType: C_User

   InclusionDirective Callback
       InclusionDirective  is  called  when an inclusion directive of any kind
       (#include</code>, #import</code>, etc.) has been	processed,  regardless
       of whether the inclusion	will actually result in	an inclusion.

       Argument	descriptions:
   +---------------+-----------------------+-----------------+------------------+
   | Argument Name | Argument	Value	   | Clang C++ Type  | Description	|
   |		   | Syntax		   |		     |			|
   +---------------+-----------------------+-----------------+------------------+
   | HashLoc	   | "(file):(line):(col)" | SourceLocation  | The location  of	|
   |		   |			   |		     | the   '#'   that	|
   |		   |			   |		     | starts  the  in-	|
   |		   |			   |		     | clusion	 direc-	|
   |		   |			   |		     | tive.		|
   +---------------+-----------------------+-----------------+------------------+
   | IncludeTok	   | (token)		   | const Token     | The  token  that	|
   |		   |			   |		     | indicates    the	|
   |		   |			   |		     | kind  of	 inclu-	|
   |		   |			   |		     | sion  directive,	|
   |		   |			   |		     | e.g.,  'include'	|
   |		   |			   |		     | or 'import'.	|
   +---------------+-----------------------+-----------------+------------------+
   | FileName	   | "(file)"		   | StringRef	     | The  name of the	|
   |		   |			   |		     | file  being  in-	|
   |		   |			   |		     | cluded, as writ-	|
   |		   |			   |		     | ten    in    the	|
   |		   |			   |		     | source code.	|
   +---------------+-----------------------+-----------------+------------------+
   | IsAngled	   | (true|false)	   | bool	     | Whether the file	|
   |		   |			   |		     | name   was   en-	|
   |		   |			   |		     | closed  in angle	|
   |		   |			   |		     | brackets; other-	|
   |		   |			   |		     | wise, it	was en-	|
   |		   |			   |		     | closed	     in	|
   |		   |			   |		     | quotes.		|
   +---------------+-----------------------+-----------------+------------------+
   | FilenameRange | "(file)"		   | CharSourceRange | The    character	|
   |		   |			   |		     | range   of   the	|
   |		   |			   |		     | quotes  or angle	|
   |		   |			   |		     | brackets	for the	|
   |		   |			   |		     | written	   file	|
   |		   |			   |		     | name.		|
   +---------------+-----------------------+-----------------+------------------+
   | File	   | "(file)"		   | const FileEntry | The  actual file	|
   |		   |			   |		     | that may	be  in-	|
   |		   |			   |		     | cluded  by  this	|
   |		   |			   |		     | inclusion direc-	|
   |		   |			   |		     | tive.		|
   +---------------+-----------------------+-----------------+------------------+
   | SearchPath	   | "(path)"		   | StringRef	     | Contains	    the	|
   |		   |			   |		     | search	   path	|
   |		   |			   |		     | which  was  used	|
   |		   |			   |		     | to find the file	|
   |		   |			   |		     | in the file sys-	|
   |		   |			   |		     | tem.		|
   +---------------+-----------------------+-----------------+------------------+
   | RelativePath  | "(path)"		   | StringRef	     | The  path  rela-	|
   |		   |			   |		     | tive to	Search-	|
   |		   |			   |		     | Path,  at  which	|
   |		   |			   |		     | the include file	|
   |		   |			   |		     | was found.	|
   +---------------+-----------------------+-----------------+------------------+
   | Imported	   | ((module		   | const Module    | The	module,	|
   |		   | name)|(null))	   |		     | whenever	 an in-	|
   |		   |			   |		     | clusion	 direc-	|
   |		   |			   |		     | tive  was  auto-	|
   |		   |			   |		     | matically turned	|
   |		   |			   |		     | into  a	 module	|
   |		   |			   |		     | import  or  null	|
   |		   |			   |		     | otherwise.	|
   +---------------+-----------------------+-----------------+------------------+

       Example::

	  - Callback: InclusionDirective
	    HashLoc: "D:/Clang/llvmnewmod/clang-tools-extra/test/pp-trace/pp-trace-include.cpp:4:1"
	    IncludeTok:	include
	    FileName: "Input/Level1B.h"
	    IsAngled: false
	    FilenameRange: "Input/Level1B.h"
	    File: "D:/Clang/llvmnewmod/clang-tools-extra/test/pp-trace/Input/Level1B.h"
	    SearchPath:	"D:/Clang/llvmnewmod/clang-tools-extra/test/pp-trace"
	    RelativePath: "Input/Level1B.h"
	    Imported: (null)

   moduleImport	Callback
       moduleImport is called when there was an	explicit module-import syntax.

       Argument	descriptions:
    +---------------+-----------------------+----------------+------------------+
    | Argument Name | Argument	 Value	    | Clang C++	Type | Description	|
    |		    | Syntax		    |		     |			|
    +---------------+-----------------------+----------------+------------------+
    | ImportLoc	    | "(file):(line):(col)" | SourceLocation | The  location of	|
    |		    |			    |		     | import directive	|
    |		    |			    |		     | token.		|
    +---------------+-----------------------+----------------+------------------+
    | Path	    | "(path)"		    | ModuleIdPath   | The  identifiers	|
    |		    |			    |		     | (and their loca-	|
    |		    |			    |		     | tions)	of  the	|
    |		    |			    |		     | module "path".	|
    +---------------+-----------------------+----------------+------------------+
    | Imported	    | ((module		    | const Module   | The     imported	|
    |		    | name)|(null))	    |		     | module;	can  be	|
    |		    |			    |		     | null if	import-	|
    |		    |			    |		     | ing failed.	|
    +---------------+-----------------------+----------------+------------------+

       Example::

	  - Callback: moduleImport
	    ImportLoc: "d:/Clang/llvm/clang-tools-extra/test/pp-trace/pp-trace-modules.cpp:4:2"
	    Path: [{Name: Level1B, Loc:	"d:/Clang/llvmnewmod/clang-tools-extra/test/pp-trace/pp-trace-modules.cpp:4:9"}, {Name:	Level2B, Loc: "d:/Clang/llvmnewmod/clang-tools-extra/test/pp-trace/pp-trace-modules.cpp:4:17"}]
	    Imported: Level2B

   EndOfMainFile Callback
       EndOfMainFile is	called when the	end of the main	file is	reached.

       Argument	descriptions:
	+----------------+------------------+----------------+-------------+
	| Argument Name	 | Argument   Value | Clang C++	Type | Description |
	|		 | Syntax	    |		     |		   |
	+----------------+------------------+----------------+-------------+
	| (no arguments) |		    |		     |		   |
	+----------------+------------------+----------------+-------------+

       Example::

	  - Callback: EndOfMainFile

   Ident Callback
       Ident is	called when a #ident or	#sccs directive	is read.

       Argument	descriptions:
    +---------------+-----------------------+----------------+------------------+
    | Argument Name | Argument	 Value	    | Clang C++	Type | Description	|
    |		    | Syntax		    |		     |			|
    +---------------+-----------------------+----------------+------------------+
    | Loc	    | "(file):(line):(col)" | SourceLocation | The  location of	|
    |		    |			    |		     | the directive.	|
    +---------------+-----------------------+----------------+------------------+
    | str	    | (name)		    | const	     | The text	of  the	|
    |		    |			    | std::string    | directive.	|
    +---------------+-----------------------+----------------+------------------+

       Example::

	  - Callback: Ident
	    Loc: "D:/Clang/llvm/clang-tools-extra/test/pp-trace/pp-trace-ident.cpp:3:1"
	    str: "$Id$"

   PragmaDirective Callback
       PragmaDirective is called when start reading any	pragma directive.

       Argument	descriptions:
+---------------+----------------------------------+-----------------+------------------+
| Argument Name	| Argument   Value		   | Clang C++ Type  | Description	|
|		| Syntax			   |		     |			|
+---------------+----------------------------------+-----------------+------------------+
| Loc		| "(file):(line):(col)"		   | SourceLocation  | The location  of	|
|		|				   |		     | the directive.	|
+---------------+----------------------------------+-----------------+------------------+
| Introducer	| (PIK_Hash-			   | PragmaIntroduc- | The  type of the	|
|		| Pragma|PIK__Pragma|PIK___pragma) | erKind	     | pragma	 direc-	|
|		|				   |		     | tive.		|
+---------------+----------------------------------+-----------------+------------------+

       Example::

	  - Callback: PragmaDirective
	    Loc: "D:/Clang/llvm/clang-tools-extra/test/pp-trace/pp-trace-pragma.cpp:3:1"
	    Introducer:	PIK_HashPragma

   PragmaComment Callback
       PragmaComment is	called when a #pragma comment directive	is read.

       Argument	descriptions:
   +---------------+-----------------------+------------------+------------------+
   | Argument Name | Argument	Value	   | Clang C++ Type   |	Description	 |
   |		   | Syntax		   |		      |			 |
   +---------------+-----------------------+------------------+------------------+
   | Loc	   | "(file):(line):(col)" | SourceLocation   |	The location  of |
   |		   |			   |		      |	the directive.	 |
   +---------------+-----------------------+------------------+------------------+
   | Kind	   | ((name)|(null))	   | const    Identi- |	The comment kind |
   |		   |			   | fierInfo	      |	symbol.		 |
   +---------------+-----------------------+------------------+------------------+
   | Str	   | (message directive)   | const	      |	The comment mes- |
   |		   |			   | std::string      |	sage directive.	 |
   +---------------+-----------------------+------------------+------------------+

       Example::

	  - Callback: PragmaComment
	    Loc: "D:/Clang/llvm/clang-tools-extra/test/pp-trace/pp-trace-pragma.cpp:3:1"
	    Kind: library
	    Str: kernel32.lib

   PragmaDetectMismatch	Callback
       PragmaDetectMismatch is called when a #pragma detect_mismatch directive
       is read.

       Argument	descriptions:
    +---------------+-----------------------+----------------+------------------+
    | Argument Name | Argument	 Value	    | Clang C++	Type | Description	|
    |		    | Syntax		    |		     |			|
    +---------------+-----------------------+----------------+------------------+
    | Loc	    | "(file):(line):(col)" | SourceLocation | The  location of	|
    |		    |			    |		     | the directive.	|
    +---------------+-----------------------+----------------+------------------+
    | Name	    | "(name)"		    | const	     | The name.	|
    |		    |			    | std::string    |			|
    +---------------+-----------------------+----------------+------------------+
    | Value	    | (string)		    | const	     | The value.	|
    |		    |			    | std::string    |			|
    +---------------+-----------------------+----------------+------------------+

       Example::

	  - Callback: PragmaDetectMismatch
	    Loc: "D:/Clang/llvm/clang-tools-extra/test/pp-trace/pp-trace-pragma.cpp:3:1"
	    Name: name
	    Value: value

   PragmaDebug Callback
       PragmaDebug is called when a #pragma clang __debug directive is read.

       Argument	descriptions:
    +---------------+-----------------------+----------------+------------------+
    | Argument Name | Argument	 Value	    | Clang C++	Type | Description	|
    |		    | Syntax		    |		     |			|
    +---------------+-----------------------+----------------+------------------+
    | Loc	    | "(file):(line):(col)" | SourceLocation | The  location of	|
    |		    |			    |		     | the directive.	|
    +---------------+-----------------------+----------------+------------------+
    | DebugType	    | (string)		    | StringRef	     | Indicates   type	|
    |		    |			    |		     | of   debug  mes-	|
    |		    |			    |		     | sage.		|
    +---------------+-----------------------+----------------+------------------+

       Example::

	  - Callback: PragmaDebug
	    Loc: "D:/Clang/llvm/clang-tools-extra/test/pp-trace/pp-trace-pragma.cpp:3:1"
	    DebugType: warning

   PragmaMessage Callback
       PragmaMessage is	called when a #pragma message directive	is read.

       Argument	descriptions:
    +---------------+-----------------------+----------------+------------------+
    | Argument Name | Argument	 Value	    | Clang C++	Type | Description	|
    |		    | Syntax		    |		     |			|
    +---------------+-----------------------+----------------+------------------+
    | Loc	    | "(file):(line):(col)" | SourceLocation | The  location of	|
    |		    |			    |		     | the directive.	|
    +---------------+-----------------------+----------------+------------------+
    | Namespace	    | (name)		    | StringRef	     | The namespace of	|
    |		    |			    |		     | the message  di-	|
    |		    |			    |		     | rective.		|
    +---------------+-----------------------+----------------+------------------+
    | Kind	    | (PMK_Mes-		    | PPCall-	     | The  type of the	|
    |		    | sage|PMK_Warn-	    | backs::Prag-   | message	 direc-	|
    |		    | ing|PMK_Error)	    | maMessageKind  | tive.		|
    +---------------+-----------------------+----------------+------------------+
    | Str	    | (string)		    | StringRef	     | The  text of the	|
    |		    |			    |		     | message	 direc-	|
    |		    |			    |		     | tive.		|
    +---------------+-----------------------+----------------+------------------+

       Example::

	  - Callback: PragmaMessage
	    Loc: "D:/Clang/llvm/clang-tools-extra/test/pp-trace/pp-trace-pragma.cpp:3:1"
	    Namespace: "GCC"
	    Kind: PMK_Message
	    Str: The message text.

   PragmaDiagnosticPush	Callback
       PragmaDiagnosticPush  is	 called	when a #pragma gcc diagnostic push di-
       rective is read.

       Argument	descriptions:
    +---------------+-----------------------+----------------+------------------+
    | Argument Name | Argument	 Value	    | Clang C++	Type | Description	|
    |		    | Syntax		    |		     |			|
    +---------------+-----------------------+----------------+------------------+
    | Loc	    | "(file):(line):(col)" | SourceLocation | The  location of	|
    |		    |			    |		     | the directive.	|
    +---------------+-----------------------+----------------+------------------+
    | Namespace	    | (name)		    | StringRef	     | Namespace name.	|
    +---------------+-----------------------+----------------+------------------+

       Example::

	  - Callback: PragmaDiagnosticPush
	    Loc: "D:/Clang/llvm/clang-tools-extra/test/pp-trace/pp-trace-pragma.cpp:3:1"
	    Namespace: "GCC"

   PragmaDiagnosticPop Callback
       PragmaDiagnosticPop is called when a #pragma gcc	diagnostic pop	direc-
       tive is read.

       Argument	descriptions:
    +---------------+-----------------------+----------------+------------------+
    | Argument Name | Argument	 Value	    | Clang C++	Type | Description	|
    |		    | Syntax		    |		     |			|
    +---------------+-----------------------+----------------+------------------+
    | Loc	    | "(file):(line):(col)" | SourceLocation | The location  of	|
    |		    |			    |		     | the directive.	|
    +---------------+-----------------------+----------------+------------------+
    | Namespace	    | (name)		    | StringRef	     | Namespace name.	|
    +---------------+-----------------------+----------------+------------------+

       Example::

	  - Callback: PragmaDiagnosticPop
	    Loc: "D:/Clang/llvm/clang-tools-extra/test/pp-trace/pp-trace-pragma.cpp:3:1"
	    Namespace: "GCC"

   PragmaDiagnostic Callback
       PragmaDiagnostic	 is  called when a #pragma gcc diagnostic directive is
       read.

       Argument	descriptions:
    +---------------+-----------------------+----------------+------------------+
    | Argument Name | Argument	 Value	    | Clang C++	Type | Description	|
    |		    | Syntax		    |		     |			|
    +---------------+-----------------------+----------------+------------------+
    | Loc	    | "(file):(line):(col)" | SourceLocation | The  location of	|
    |		    |			    |		     | the directive.	|
    +---------------+-----------------------+----------------+------------------+
    | Namespace	    | (name)		    | StringRef	     | Namespace name.	|
    +---------------+-----------------------+----------------+------------------+
    | mapping	    | (0|MAP_IG-	    | diag::Severity | Mapping type.	|
    |		    | NORE|MAP_WARN-	    |		     |			|
    |		    | ING|MAP_ERROR|MAP_FA- |		     |			|
    |		    | TAL)		    |		     |			|
    +---------------+-----------------------+----------------+------------------+
    | Str	    | (string)		    | StringRef	     | Warning/error	|
    |		    |			    |		     | name.		|
    +---------------+-----------------------+----------------+------------------+

       Example::

	  - Callback: PragmaDiagnostic
	    Loc: "D:/Clang/llvm/clang-tools-extra/test/pp-trace/pp-trace-pragma.cpp:3:1"
	    Namespace: "GCC"
	    mapping: MAP_WARNING
	    Str: WarningName

   PragmaOpenCLExtension Callback
       PragmaOpenCLExtension is	called when OpenCL extension  is  either  dis-
       abled or	enabled	with a pragma.

       Argument	descriptions:
   +---------------+-----------------------+------------------+------------------+
   | Argument Name | Argument	Value	   | Clang C++ Type   |	Description	 |
   |		   | Syntax		   |		      |			 |
   +---------------+-----------------------+------------------+------------------+
   | NameLoc	   | "(file):(line):(col)" | SourceLocation   |	The location  of |
   |		   |			   |		      |	the name.	 |
   +---------------+-----------------------+------------------+------------------+
   | Name	   | (name)		   | const    Identi- |	Name symbol.	 |
   |		   |			   | fierInfo	      |			 |
   +---------------+-----------------------+------------------+------------------+
   | StateLoc	   | "(file):(line):(col)" | SourceLocation   |	The location  of |
   |		   |			   |		      |	the state.	 |
   +---------------+-----------------------+------------------+------------------+
   | State	   | (1|0)		   | unsigned	      |	Enabled/disabled |
   |		   |			   |		      |	state.		 |
   +---------------+-----------------------+------------------+------------------+

       Example::

	  - Callback: PragmaOpenCLExtension
	    NameLoc: "D:/Clang/llvm/clang-tools-extra/test/pp-trace/pp-trace-pragma.cpp:3:10"
	    Name: Name
	    StateLoc: "D:/Clang/llvm/clang-tools-extra/test/pp-trace/pp-trace-pragma.cpp:3:18"
	    State: 1

   PragmaWarning Callback
       PragmaWarning is	called when a #pragma warning directive	is read.

       Argument	descriptions:
    +---------------+-----------------------+----------------+------------------+
    | Argument Name | Argument	 Value	    | Clang C++	Type | Description	|
    |		    | Syntax		    |		     |			|
    +---------------+-----------------------+----------------+------------------+
    | Loc	    | "(file):(line):(col)" | SourceLocation | The location  of	|
    |		    |			    |		     | the directive.	|
    +---------------+-----------------------+----------------+------------------+
    | WarningSpec   | (string)		    | StringRef	     | The	warning	|
    |		    |			    |		     | specifier.	|
    +---------------+-----------------------+----------------+------------------+
    | Ids	    | [(number)[, ...]]	    | ArrayRef<int>  | The warning num-	|
    |		    |			    |		     | bers.		|
    +---------------+-----------------------+----------------+------------------+

       Example::

	  - Callback: PragmaWarning
	    Loc: "D:/Clang/llvm/clang-tools-extra/test/pp-trace/pp-trace-pragma.cpp:3:1"
	    WarningSpec: disable
	    Ids: 1,2,3

   PragmaWarningPush Callback
       PragmaWarningPush is called when	a #pragma warning(push)	 directive  is
       read.

       Argument	descriptions:
    +---------------+-----------------------+----------------+------------------+
    | Argument Name | Argument	 Value	    | Clang C++	Type | Description	|
    |		    | Syntax		    |		     |			|
    +---------------+-----------------------+----------------+------------------+
    | Loc	    | "(file):(line):(col)" | SourceLocation | The location  of	|
    |		    |			    |		     | the directive.	|
    +---------------+-----------------------+----------------+------------------+
    | Level	    | (number)		    | int	     | Warning level.	|
    +---------------+-----------------------+----------------+------------------+

       Example::

	  - Callback: PragmaWarningPush
	    Loc: "D:/Clang/llvm/clang-tools-extra/test/pp-trace/pp-trace-pragma.cpp:3:1"
	    Level: 1

   PragmaWarningPop Callback
       PragmaWarningPop	 is  called  when  a #pragma warning(pop) directive is
       read.

       Argument	descriptions:
    +---------------+-----------------------+----------------+------------------+
    | Argument Name | Argument	 Value	    | Clang C++	Type | Description	|
    |		    | Syntax		    |		     |			|
    +---------------+-----------------------+----------------+------------------+
    | Loc	    | "(file):(line):(col)" | SourceLocation | The  location of	|
    |		    |			    |		     | the directive.	|
    +---------------+-----------------------+----------------+------------------+

       Example::

	  - Callback: PragmaWarningPop
	    Loc: "D:/Clang/llvm/clang-tools-extra/test/pp-trace/pp-trace-pragma.cpp:3:1"

   MacroExpands	Callback
       MacroExpands is	called	when  ::HandleMacroExpandedIdentifier  when  a
       macro invocation	is found.

       Argument	descriptions:
 +----------------+-------------------------+------------------+------------------+
 | Argument Name  | Argument   Value	    | Clang C++	Type   | Description	  |
 |		  | Syntax		    |		       |		  |
 +----------------+-------------------------+------------------+------------------+
 | MacroNameTok	  | (token)		    | const Token      | The  macro  name |
 |		  |			    |		       | token.		  |
 +----------------+-------------------------+------------------+------------------+
 | MacroDirective | (MD_De-		    | const   MacroDi- | The   kind    of |
 |		  | fine|MD_Unde-	    | rective	       | macro	directive |
 |		  | fine|MD_Visibil-	    |		       | from	      the |
 |		  | ity)		    |		       | MacroDirective	  |
 |		  |			    |		       | structure.	  |
 +----------------+-------------------------+------------------+------------------+
 | Range	  | ["(file):(line):(col)", | SourceRange      | The source range |
 |		  | "(file):(line):(col)"]  |		       | for  the  expan- |
 |		  |			    |		       | sion.		  |
 +----------------+-------------------------+------------------+------------------+
 | Args		  | [(name)|(number)|<(to-  | const MacroArgs  | The argument to- |
 |		  | ken	name)>[, ...]]	    |		       | kens. Names  and |
 |		  |			    |		       | numbers are lit- |
 |		  |			    |		       | eral, everything |
 |		  |			    |		       | else  is  of the |
 |		  |			    |		       | form '<'  token- |
 |		  |			    |		       | Name '>'.	  |
 +----------------+-------------------------+------------------+------------------+

       Example::

	  - Callback: MacroExpands
	    MacroNameTok: X_IMPL
	    MacroDirective: MD_Define
	    Range: [(nonfile), (nonfile)]
	    Args: [a <plus> y, b]

   MacroDefined	Callback
       MacroDefined is called when a macro definition is seen.

       Argument	descriptions:
     +----------------+------------------+------------------+------------------+
     | Argument	Name  |	Argument   Value | Clang C++ Type   | Description      |
     |		      |	Syntax		 |		    |		       |
     +----------------+------------------+------------------+------------------+
     | MacroNameTok   |	(token)		 | const Token	    | The  macro  name |
     |		      |			 |		    | token.	       |
     +----------------+------------------+------------------+------------------+
     | MacroDirective |	(MD_De-		 | const   MacroDi- | The   kind    of |
     |		      |	fine|MD_Unde-	 | rective	    | macro  directive |
     |		      |	fine|MD_Visibil- |		    | from	   the |
     |		      |	ity)		 |		    | MacroDirective   |
     |		      |			 |		    | structure.       |
     +----------------+------------------+------------------+------------------+

       Example::

	  - Callback: MacroDefined
	    MacroNameTok: X_IMPL
	    MacroDirective: MD_Define

   MacroUndefined Callback
       MacroUndefined is called	when a macro #undef is seen.

       Argument	descriptions:
     +----------------+------------------+------------------+------------------+
     | Argument	Name  |	Argument   Value | Clang C++ Type   | Description      |
     |		      |	Syntax		 |		    |		       |
     +----------------+------------------+------------------+------------------+
     | MacroNameTok   |	(token)		 | const Token	    | The  macro  name |
     |		      |			 |		    | token.	       |
     +----------------+------------------+------------------+------------------+
     | MacroDirective |	(MD_De-		 | const   MacroDi- | The   kind    of |
     |		      |	fine|MD_Unde-	 | rective	    | macro  directive |
     |		      |	fine|MD_Visibil- |		    | from	   the |
     |		      |	ity)		 |		    | MacroDirective   |
     |		      |			 |		    | structure.       |
     +----------------+------------------+------------------+------------------+

       Example::

	  - Callback: MacroUndefined
	    MacroNameTok: X_IMPL
	    MacroDirective: MD_Define

   Defined Callback
       Defined is called when the 'defined' operator is	seen.

       Argument	descriptions:
 +----------------+-------------------------+------------------+------------------+
 | Argument Name  | Argument   Value	    | Clang C++	Type   | Description	  |
 |		  | Syntax		    |		       |		  |
 +----------------+-------------------------+------------------+------------------+
 | MacroNameTok	  | (token)		    | const Token      | The  macro  name |
 |		  |			    |		       | token.		  |
 +----------------+-------------------------+------------------+------------------+
 | MacroDirective | (MD_De-		    | const   MacroDi- | The   kind    of |
 |		  | fine|MD_Unde-	    | rective	       | macro	directive |
 |		  | fine|MD_Visibil-	    |		       | from	      the |
 |		  | ity)		    |		       | MacroDirective	  |
 |		  |			    |		       | structure.	  |
 +----------------+-------------------------+------------------+------------------+
 | Range	  | ["(file):(line):(col)", | SourceRange      | The source range |
 |		  | "(file):(line):(col)"]  |		       | for  the  direc- |
 |		  |			    |		       | tive.		  |
 +----------------+-------------------------+------------------+------------------+

       Example::

	  - Callback: Defined
	    MacroNameTok: MACRO
	    MacroDirective: (null)
	    Range: ["D:/Clang/llvm/clang-tools-extra/test/pp-trace/pp-trace-macro.cpp:8:5", "D:/Clang/llvm/clang-tools-extra/test/pp-trace/pp-trace-macro.cpp:8:19"]

   SourceRangeSkipped Callback
       SourceRangeSkipped is called when a source range	is skipped.

       Argument	descriptions:
   +---------------+-------------------------+----------------+------------------+
   | Argument Name | Argument	Value	     | Clang C++ Type |	Description	 |
   |		   | Syntax		     |		      |			 |
   +---------------+-------------------------+----------------+------------------+
   | Range	   | ["(file):(line):(col)", | SourceRange    |	The source range |
   |		   | "(file):(line):(col)"]  |		      |	skipped.	 |
   +---------------+-------------------------+----------------+------------------+

       Example::

	  - Callback: SourceRangeSkipped
	    Range: [":/Clang/llvm/clang-tools-extra/test/pp-trace/pp-trace-macro.cpp:8:2", ":/Clang/llvm/clang-tools-extra/test/pp-trace/pp-trace-macro.cpp:9:2"]

   If Callback
       If is called when an #if	is seen.

       Argument	descriptions:
  +----------------+-------------------------+----------------+------------------+
  | Argument Name  | Argument	Value	     | Clang C++ Type |	Description	 |
  |		   | Syntax		     |		      |			 |
  +----------------+-------------------------+----------------+------------------+
  | Loc		   | "(file):(line):(col)"   | SourceLocation |	The location  of |
  |		   |			     |		      |	the directive.	 |
  +----------------+-------------------------+----------------+------------------+
  | ConditionRange | ["(file):(line):(col)", | SourceRange    |	The source range |
  |		   | "(file):(line):(col)"]  |		      |	for  the  condi- |
  |		   |			     |		      |	tion.		 |
  +----------------+-------------------------+----------------+------------------+
  | ConditionValue | (true|false)	     | bool	      |	The    condition |
  |		   |			     |		      |	value.		 |
  +----------------+-------------------------+----------------+------------------+

       Example::

	  - Callback: If
	    Loc: "D:/Clang/llvm/clang-tools-extra/test/pp-trace/pp-trace-macro.cpp:8:2"
	    ConditionRange: ["D:/Clang/llvm/clang-tools-extra/test/pp-trace/pp-trace-macro.cpp:8:4", "D:/Clang/llvm/clang-tools-extra/test/pp-trace/pp-trace-macro.cpp:9:1"]
	    ConditionValue: false

   Elif	Callback
       Elif is called when an #elif is seen.

       Argument	descriptions:
  +----------------+-------------------------+----------------+------------------+
  | Argument Name  | Argument	Value	     | Clang C++ Type |	Description	 |
  |		   | Syntax		     |		      |			 |
  +----------------+-------------------------+----------------+------------------+
  | Loc		   | "(file):(line):(col)"   | SourceLocation |	The location  of |
  |		   |			     |		      |	the directive.	 |
  +----------------+-------------------------+----------------+------------------+
  | ConditionRange | ["(file):(line):(col)", | SourceRange    |	The source range |
  |		   | "(file):(line):(col)"]  |		      |	for  the  condi- |
  |		   |			     |		      |	tion.		 |
  +----------------+-------------------------+----------------+------------------+
  | ConditionValue | (true|false)	     | bool	      |	The    condition |
  |		   |			     |		      |	value.		 |
  +----------------+-------------------------+----------------+------------------+
  | IfLoc	   | "(file):(line):(col)"   | SourceLocation |	The  location of |
  |		   |			     |		      |	the directive.	 |
  +----------------+-------------------------+----------------+------------------+

       Example::

	  - Callback: Elif
	    Loc: "D:/Clang/llvm/clang-tools-extra/test/pp-trace/pp-trace-macro.cpp:10:2"
	    ConditionRange: ["D:/Clang/llvm/clang-tools-extra/test/pp-trace/pp-trace-macro.cpp:10:4", "D:/Clang/llvm/clang-tools-extra/test/pp-trace/pp-trace-macro.cpp:11:1"]
	    ConditionValue: false
	    IfLoc: "D:/Clang/llvm/clang-tools-extra/test/pp-trace/pp-trace-macro.cpp:8:2"

   Ifdef Callback
       Ifdef is	called when an #ifdef is seen.

       Argument	descriptions:
  +----------------+-----------------------+------------------+------------------+
  | Argument Name  | Argument	Value	   | Clang C++ Type   |	Description	 |
  |		   | Syntax		   |		      |			 |
  +----------------+-----------------------+------------------+------------------+
  | Loc		   | "(file):(line):(col)" | SourceLocation   |	The  location of |
  |		   |			   |		      |	the directive.	 |
  +----------------+-----------------------+------------------+------------------+
  | MacroNameTok   | (token)		   | const Token      |	The  macro  name |
  |		   |			   |		      |	token.		 |
  +----------------+-----------------------+------------------+------------------+
  | MacroDirective | (MD_Define|MD_Unde-   | const   MacroDi- |	The   kind    of |
  |		   | fine|MD_Visibility)   | rective	      |	macro  directive |
  |		   |			   |		      |	from	     the |
  |		   |			   |		      |	MacroDirective	 |
  |		   |			   |		      |	structure.	 |
  +----------------+-----------------------+------------------+------------------+

       Example::

	  - Callback: Ifdef
	    Loc: "D:/Clang/llvm/clang-tools-extra/test/pp-trace/pp-trace-conditional.cpp:3:1"
	    MacroNameTok: MACRO
	    MacroDirective: MD_Define

   Ifndef Callback
       Ifndef is called	when an	#ifndef	is seen.

       Argument	descriptions:
  +----------------+-----------------------+------------------+------------------+
  | Argument Name  | Argument	Value	   | Clang C++ Type   |	Description	 |
  |		   | Syntax		   |		      |			 |
  +----------------+-----------------------+------------------+------------------+
  | Loc		   | "(file):(line):(col)" | SourceLocation   |	The location  of |
  |		   |			   |		      |	the directive.	 |
  +----------------+-----------------------+------------------+------------------+
  | MacroNameTok   | (token)		   | const Token      |	The  macro  name |
  |		   |			   |		      |	token.		 |
  +----------------+-----------------------+------------------+------------------+
  | MacroDirective | (MD_Define|MD_Unde-   | const   MacroDi- |	The    kind   of |
  |		   | fine|MD_Visibility)   | rective	      |	macro  directive |
  |		   |			   |		      |	from	     the |
  |		   |			   |		      |	MacroDirective	 |
  |		   |			   |		      |	structure.	 |
  +----------------+-----------------------+------------------+------------------+

       Example::

	  - Callback: Ifndef
	    Loc: "D:/Clang/llvm/clang-tools-extra/test/pp-trace/pp-trace-conditional.cpp:3:1"
	    MacroNameTok: MACRO
	    MacroDirective: MD_Define

   Else	Callback
       Else is called when an #else is seen.

       Argument	descriptions:
    +---------------+-----------------------+----------------+------------------+
    | Argument Name | Argument	 Value	    | Clang C++	Type | Description	|
    |		    | Syntax		    |		     |			|
    +---------------+-----------------------+----------------+------------------+
    | Loc	    | "(file):(line):(col)" | SourceLocation | The  location of	|
    |		    |			    |		     | the else	 direc-	|
    |		    |			    |		     | tive.		|
    +---------------+-----------------------+----------------+------------------+
    | IfLoc	    | "(file):(line):(col)" | SourceLocation | The  location of	|
    |		    |			    |		     | the  if	 direc-	|
    |		    |			    |		     | tive.		|
    +---------------+-----------------------+----------------+------------------+

       Example::

	  - Callback: Else
	    Loc: "D:/Clang/llvm/clang-tools-extra/test/pp-trace/pp-trace-macro.cpp:10:2"
	    IfLoc: "D:/Clang/llvm/clang-tools-extra/test/pp-trace/pp-trace-macro.cpp:8:2"

   Endif Callback
       Endif is	called when an #endif is seen.

       Argument	descriptions:
    +---------------+-----------------------+----------------+------------------+
    | Argument Name | Argument	 Value	    | Clang C++	Type | Description	|
    |		    | Syntax		    |		     |			|
    +---------------+-----------------------+----------------+------------------+
    | Loc	    | "(file):(line):(col)" | SourceLocation | The location  of	|
    |		    |			    |		     | the endif direc-	|
    |		    |			    |		     | tive.		|
    +---------------+-----------------------+----------------+------------------+
    | IfLoc	    | "(file):(line):(col)" | SourceLocation | The  location of	|
    |		    |			    |		     | the  if	 direc-	|
    |		    |			    |		     | tive.		|
    +---------------+-----------------------+----------------+------------------+

       Example::

	  - Callback: Endif
	    Loc: "D:/Clang/llvm/clang-tools-extra/test/pp-trace/pp-trace-macro.cpp:10:2"
	    IfLoc: "D:/Clang/llvm/clang-tools-extra/test/pp-trace/pp-trace-macro.cpp:8:2"

   Building pp-trace
       To build	from source:

       1. Read Getting Started with the	LLVM System and	Clang Tools Documenta-
	  tion	for  information on getting sources for	LLVM, Clang, and Clang
	  Extra	Tools.

       2. Getting Started with the LLVM	System and Building  LLVM  with	 CMake
	  give	directions for how to build. With sources all checked out into
	  the right place the LLVM build will  build  Clang  Extra  Tools  and
	  their	dependencies automatically.

	   If using CMake, you	can also use the pp-trace target to build just
	    the	pp-trace tool and its dependencies.

CLANG-RENAME
   Contents
        Clang-Rename

	  Using Clang-Rename

	  Vim Integration

	  Emacs Integration

       See also:

       clang-rename is a C++ refactoring tool. Its purpose is to perform effi-
       cient  renaming	actions	 in  large-scale  projects  such  as  renaming
       classes,	functions, variables, arguments, namespaces etc.

       The tool	is in a	very early development stage, so you  might  encounter
       bugs  and crashes. Submitting reports with information about how	to re-
       produce the issue to the	 LLVM  bugtracker  will	 definitely  help  the
       project.	 If you	have any ideas or suggestions, you might want to put a
       feature request there.

   Using Clang-Rename
       clang-rename is a LibTooling-based tool,	and it's easier	to  work  with
       if you set up a compile command database	for your project (for an exam-
       ple  of how to do this see How To Setup Tooling For LLVM). You can also
       specify compilation options on the command line after --:

	  $ clang-rename -offset=42 -new-name=foo test.cpp -- -Imy_project/include -DMY_DEFINES	...

       To get an offset	of a symbol in a file run

	  $ grep -FUbo 'foo' file.cpp

       The tool	currently supports renaming actions inside a  single  transla-
       tion  unit  only.  It  is planned to extend the tool's functionality to
       support multi-TU	renaming actions in the	future.

       clang-rename also aims to be easily integrated into popular  text  edi-
       tors, such as Vim and Emacs, and	improve	the workflow of	users.

       Although	 a  command line interface exists, it is highly	recommended to
       use the text editor interface instead for better	experience.

       You can also identify one or more symbols to be renamed by  giving  the
       fully qualified name:

	  $ clang-rename -qualified-name=foo -new-name=bar test.cpp

       Renaming	multiple symbols at once is supported, too. However, clang-re-
       name  doesn't accept both -offset and -qualified-name at	the same time.
       So, you can either specify multiple -offset or -qualified-name.

	  $ clang-rename -offset=42 -new-name=bar1 -offset=150 -new-name=bar2 test.cpp

       or

	  $ clang-rename -qualified-name=foo1 -new-name=bar1 -qualified-name=foo2 -new-name=bar2 test.cpp

       Alternatively, {offset |	qualified-name}	/ new-name pairs  can  be  put
       into a YAML file:

	  ---
	  - Offset:	    42
	    NewName:	    bar1
	  - Offset:	    150
	    NewName:	    bar2
	  ...

       or

	  ---
	  - QualifiedName:  foo1
	    NewName:	    bar1
	  - QualifiedName:  foo2
	    NewName:	    bar2
	  ...

       That way	you can	avoid spelling out all the names as command line argu-
       ments:

	  $ clang-rename -input=test.yaml test.cpp

       clang-rename offers the following options:

	  $ clang-rename --help
	  USAGE: clang-rename [subcommand] [options] <source0> [... <sourceN>]

	  OPTIONS:

	  Generic Options:

	    -help		       - Display available options (-help-hidden for more)
	    -help-list		       - Display list of available options (-help-list-hidden for more)
	    -version		       - Display the version of	this program

	  clang-rename common options:

	    -export-fixes=<filename>   - YAML file to store suggested fixes in.
	    -extra-arg=<string>	       - Additional argument to	append to the compiler command line
					 Can be	used several times.
	    -extra-arg-before=<string> - Additional argument to	prepend	to the compiler	command	line
					 Can be	used several times.
	    -force		       - Ignore	nonexistent qualified names.
	    -i			       - Overwrite edited <file>s.
	    -input=<string>	       - YAML file to load oldname-newname pairs from.
	    -new-name=<string>	       - The new name to change	the symbol to.
	    -offset=<uint>	       - Locates the symbol by offset as opposed to <line>:<column>.
	    -p <string>		       - Build path
	    -pl			       - Print the locations affected by renaming to stderr.
	    -pn			       - Print the found symbol's name prior to	renaming to stderr.
	    -qualified-name=<string>   - The fully qualified name of the symbol.

   Vim Integration
       You can call clang-rename directly from Vim! To set up clang-rename in-
       tegration for Vim see clang/tools/clang-rename/clang-rename.py.

       Please note that	you have to save all buffers, in which the replacement
       will happen before running the tool.

       Once  installed,	 you  can point	your cursor to symbols you want	to re-
       name, press <leader>cr and type new desired name. The <leader> key is a
       reference to a specific key defined by the mapleader  variable  and  is
       bound to	backslash by default.

   Emacs Integration
       You can also use	clang-rename while using Emacs!	To set up clang-rename
       integration for Emacs see clang-rename/tool/clang-rename.el.

       Once  installed,	 you  can point	your cursor to symbols you want	to re-
       name, press M-X,	type clang-rename and new desired name.

       Please note that	you have to save all buffers, in which the replacement
       will happen before running the tool.

CLANG-DOC
   Contents
        Clang-Doc

	  Use

	  Output

	  Configuration

	    Options

       clang-doc is a tool for generating C and	C++ documentation from	source
       code and	comments.

       The  tool  is in	a very early development stage,	so you might encounter
       bugs and	crashes. Submitting reports with information about how to  re-
       produce	the  issue  to	the  LLVM bug tracker will definitely help the
       project.	If you have any	ideas or suggestions, please to	put a  feature
       request there.

   Use
       clang-doc is a LibTooling-based tool, and so requires a compile command
       database	 for your project (for an example of how to do this see	How To
       Setup Tooling For LLVM).

       By default, the tool will run on	all files listed in the	given  compile
       commands	database:

	  $ clang-doc /path/to/compile_commands.json

       The tool	can also be used on a single file or multiple files if a build
       path is passed with the -p flag.

	  $ clang-doc /path/to/file.cpp	-p /path/to/build

   Output
       clang-doc  produces  a directory	of documentation. One file is produced
       for each	namespace and record in	the project  source  code,  containing
       all  documentation  (including contained	functions, methods, and	enums)
       for that	item.

       The top-level directory is configurable through the output flag:

	  $ clang-doc -output=output/directory/	compile_commands.json

   Configuration
       Configuration for clang-doc is currently	limited	 to  command-line  op-
       tions.	In  the	future,	it may develop the ability to use a configura-
       tion file, but no such efforts are currently in progress.

   Options
       clang-doc offers	the following options:

	  $ clang-doc --help
	  USAGE: clang-doc [options] <source0> [... <sourceN>]

	  OPTIONS:

	  Generic Options:

	    -help		       - Display available options (-help-hidden for more)
	    -help-list		       - Display list of available options (-help-list-hidden for more)
	    -version		       - Display the version of	this program

	  clang-doc options:

	    --doxygen			- Use only doxygen-style comments to generate docs.
	    --extra-arg=<string>	- Additional argument to append	to the compiler	command	line
					  Can be used several times.
	    --extra-arg-before=<string>	- Additional argument to prepend to the	compiler command line
					  Can be used several times.
	    --format=<value>		- Format for outputted docs.
	      =yaml			-   Documentation in YAML format.
	      =md			-   Documentation in MD	format.
	      =html			-   Documentation in HTML format.
	    --ignore-map-errors		- Continue if files are	not mapped correctly.
	    --output=<string>		- Directory for	outputting generated files.
	    -p <string>			- Build	path
	    --project-name=<string>	- Name of project.
	    --public			- Document only	public declarations.
	    --repository=<string>	-
					  URL of repository that hosts code.
					  Used for links to definition locations.
	    --source-root=<string>	-
					  Directory where processed files are stored.
					  Links	to definition locations	will only be
					  generated if the file	is in this dir.
	    --stylesheets=<string>	- CSS stylesheets to extend the	default	styles.

       The following flags should only be used if format is  set  to  html:  -
       repository - source-root	- stylesheets

       The Doxygen documentation describes the internal	software that makes up
       the  tools  of  clang-tools-extra, not the external use of these	tools.
       The Doxygen documentation contains no instructions about	how to use the
       tools, only the APIs that make up the software. For usage instructions,
       please see the user's guide or reference	manual for each	tool.

        Doxygen documentation

       NOTE:
	  This documentation is	generated directly from	the source  code  with
	  doxygen.   Since the tools of	clang-tools-extra are constantly under
	  active development, what you're about	to read	is out of date!

        Index

        Search	Page

AUTHOR
       The Clang Team

COPYRIGHT
       2007-2025, The Clang Team

15				 Apr 13, 2025		    EXTRACLANGTOOLS(1)

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